The Quest Of The Overself: The classic work on how to achieve serenity of mind

The Quest Of The Overself: The classic work on how to achieve serenity of mind

by PAUL BRUNTON (Author), P Brunton (Author)

Synopsis

The Quest of the Overself shows Western readers how to achieve serenity of mind, control of thought and desire, and the power to use higher forces by means of simple exercises. These include breathing and visualisation as well as mental control through meditation. These ideas, which the author gained by extensive travel in India, are as relevant to us today as they were when first published in 1937. Paul Brunton was a British philosopher, mystic and traveler. He left a successful journalistic career to live among yogis and holy men and studied a wide variety of Eastern and Western esoteric spiritual traditions. As he explains in the still fresh and fascinating The Quest of the Overself, meditation and the quest for inner peace are by no means exclusively for monks and hermits but also support those living everyday, active lives in the West.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 352
Edition: New ed
Publisher: Rider
Published: 06 Mar 2003

ISBN 10: 184413041X
ISBN 13: 9781844130412
Book Overview: 'The safest and most rational exploration of Eastern metaphysics and mental discipline I have read' Spectator

Media Reviews
[The Quest of the Overself] gains enormously by the fact that [Paul Brunton] is a mystic himself. He writes deliberately for the Western mind and what he says is not the justification of a particular philosophy so much as a plea for mysticism as the revealer of certain underlying realities. * Spectator *
At once his deepest and most considerable work thus far. And it is written with a measure of real mastery of his subject. * The Science of Thought Review *
Author Bio
Born in London in 1898, Paul Brunton published thirteen books between 1935 and 1952. He is generally recognized as having introduced yoga and meditation to the West, and for presenting their philosophical background in non-technical language. He died in Switzerland (where he lived for 20 years) in 1981.