This book is an engaging introduction to Watts' fascinating and enduring Zen teachings.
This book is an engaging introduction to Watts' fascinating and enduring Zen teachings.
'Everything disappears into nothing at all, but out of that same nothing at all come all the new things, forever and ever.' - Alan Watts
When Jack Kerouac wrote his novel Dharma Bums, his views on Zen Buddhism echoed the sentiments of the Beat Generation, who found in Zen a way of life unencumbered by the limits of 'square' society. And it was the philosopher Alan Watts who first wrote and spoke about Zen and Eastern culture in terms accessible to mainstream Western audiences. Watts was an engaging speaker and an icon of America's Beat and Counterculture movements who named among his friends Aldous Huxley, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, John Cage, and Joseph Campbell.
Through his popular radio series Way Beyond the West, Alan Watts presented the practical side of Zen, which he described as 'a cure for education and culture'. By the early sixties, his radio programs were renowned for their synthesis of Eastern wisdom and everyday life.
Watts' teachings during an era of turmoil and political strife are as timely today as they were over 50 years ago. The fascinating essays in this collection include:
This book is an engaging introduction to Watts' fascinating and enduring Zen teachings.
"It's easy to see why…his influence remains strong, not only in the Buddhist sanghas mushrooming across America but throughout popular culture…" —The New York Times
"One of the best chapters in this book is "Zen and the Art of the Controlled Accident" where the author explores indirection and the Eastern view of the floating world that vanishes. Oddly enough Zen and the Beat Way is thoroughly Western Zen — it is testament to the enduring impact of Alan Watts on contemporary spiritual seekers." —Spirituality & Practice
Alan Watts (1915-1973) was a former Episcopal priest, born in London in 1915. He came to the U.S. in the 1930s, where he would become a scholar of Eastern religions. He moved to San Francisco in 1951 where he began teaching Buddhist studies, and in 1956 began his popular radio show, Way Beyond the West. By the early 1960s, Alan's radio talks aired nationally and the counterculture movement adopted him as a spiritual spokesperson. He went on to write more than twenty other books. He died in 1973.
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