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				Mircea Eliade (1907-1986) 
			 
			
		
		
		
		The  following essay was originally published in English in East and West,  vol. 6, no. 3 (1955): 224–30. This is chapter 9 of Julius Evola,  East and West: Comparative Studies in Pursuit of Tradition, ed. Greg  Johnson, forthcoming from Counter-Currents in the summer of 2013. 
Yoga, may well he said to be that portion of the heritage of Indian  wisdom—nay, of the wisdom of the East as a whole—that is most familiar to  Western Europeans and to Americans. Even newspaper  readers and readers of popular fiction of the Somerset Maugham type, have an  idea—confused though it may be—of Yoga and the yogis. Ever since the opening of  the century they have attracted the attention of the West. And here it should be  noted that at first, rather than of the serious studies made by Oriental  scholars, it has been a question of superficial works written less with a view  to making the theory known, than for acquainting the reader with the techniques  followed to secure results on the spiritual plane and to produce supernormal  phenomena. It is known that among these popularizers a foremost place is held by  Ramacharaka, the pseudonym used by an American. His works however have often  been mere profanations and distortions. The real substance and final aims of  Yoga are often set aside in favor of commonplace applications and adaptations  such as physical training, psychic training, the secret of success, deep  breathing as a branch of hygiene, mental treatment of disease, Americanized  Yoga, and so forth.
Perhaps still more regrettable has been the insertion of Yoga in a vaguely  spiritualized framework or in a purely fanciful one. In this field the record  has been beaten by the http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1565892127/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1565892127&linkCode=as2&tag=countecurrenp-20 , by Yogananda, a book on the level of fairytales for children  which in the West has scored a bookselling success and has been translated into  several languages. As Yogananda is a Hindu, it should be noted that the spate of  Western popularizers and adapters has been followed by another of writers  exported from India, attracted abroad by the environment prepared by the Western  popularizers. This second group has given rise to a dangerous misunderstanding.  Persons lacking the knowledge required for discriminating have thought that the  mere fact of being a Hindu sufficed to make a man an authority on Hindu  doctrines. Now, for intrinsic reasons due to the essentially esoteric nature of  real Yoga, there is good reason to presume that those Orientals who feel the  need of popularizing such doctrines and who become, so to speak, commercial  travelers, peddling their goods in the West, can only be spurious exponents of  their traditions. The same may be said of some Indians who have made themselves  readily “accessible” as “masters” in their own country, opening study centers,  sometimes provided with typist, an administrative department, a correspondence  bureau, etc. As a result of this, it often happens that those Westerners who  have succeeded in penetrating and illustrating the real essence of the  traditional wisdom of India are asked if they have not been engaged in the  construction of some abstract ideal of their own, so different is the level of  the teachings they impart to that of the authentic Indians of our day who have  become the exporters and vulgarizers of the ancient wisdom.
It is only recently that scientific studies on Yoga by Westerners are keeping  pace with those works of divulgation, as contributions in the domain of  orientalism and the history of religions. But here we meet with the obstacle  created by the “objective method” which aims at an exclusively exterior,  documentary, and informative exactness. It is like undertaking the study of the  geometry of solids with the means provided by plane geometry only. In the case  of Yoga if the “depth dimension” be set aside, little remains but an empty husk,  of little use not only in the practical but also in the theoretical field; it is  little more than an object of curiosity. Nevertheless, in several Western  circles which are serious and not merely interested in vague “spirituality,” the  possible importance of Yoga in its bearing on the problems besetting the modern  mind is beginning to be felt. Significant in this connection is the subtitle  given to a collection of studies on Yoga recently published by J. Masui: “The  Science of the Whole Man.”
Another work on the scientific plane recently published is Mircea Eliade’s  http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0691142033/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0691142033&linkCode=as2&tag=countecurrenp-20  of which we wish to speak here. Having studied for three years in  the University of Calcutta under Surendranath Dasgupta, the well-known author of  several books on Indian philosophy and religion, and having spent some time in  the ashram of Rishikesh, near the Himalayas, Eliade would seem to be in an  exceptionally favorable position for dealing with this subject. Nevertheless we  are inclined to think that Eliade’s qualifications for the task he has  undertaken are not due to these circumstances, except as regards his mastery of  philology, his knowledge of the texts, and his general information. In spite of  his undoubted talents, Prof. Dasgupta is a markedly westernized Indian who  follows the method of “neutral exposition,” and the ashram of Rishikesh, like  others more or less accessible, is not so much a center of severe initiation and  supervised practice as an environment whose atmosphere is similar to that of the  “religious retreats” of the West. Eliade owes his special qualifications to  another source; they derive from the fact that before going to India he had  acquired knowledge of metaphysical and esoteric doctrines which as such are not  of an “official” character. It is essentially to those doctrines that Eliade is  indebted for some points of view that place his works on a different plane from  those of most writers on oriental ideas and the history of religions. All this,  however, is not placed in the foreground. Eliade is very anxious to keep in line  with the academic world of the West. Among the many hundreds of authors he  quotes it would be difficult to find works that do not enjoy definite academic  recognition. One might ask if this does not conceal an attempt to introduce a  Trojan Horse into the citadel of official culture, an effort which would seem on  the one hand to have met with success, as shown by the favorable and unusually  prompt reception given to Eliade’s works by those circles, but which is not  exempt from the danger of “counter shocks.”
Our fundamental opinion of Eliade’s work on Yoga may be expressed by saying  that it is the most complete of all those that have been written on this subject  in the domain of the history of religions and of Orientalism. One cannot mention  another that for wealth of information, for comparisons, for philological  accuracy, for the examination and utilization of all previous contributions,  stands on the same level. But when once this has been admitted, some  reservations have to be made. In the first place it would seem that the material  he handles has often got the better of the writer. I mean to say that in his  anxiety to make use of all, really all, that is known on the several varieties  of Yoga and on what is directly or indirectly connected therewith, he has  neglected the need of discriminating and selecting so as to give importance only  to those parts of Yoga that are standard and typical, avoiding the danger that  the reader lose track of the essential features by confusing them with the mass  of information on secondary matters, variations, and side products. Looking at  it from this standpoint, we are even led to wonder whether Eliade’s previous  book Yoga, essai sur les origines de la mystique indienne (Paris, 1936),  is not in some respects superior to this last one, which is a reconstruction of  the former. In the first book the essential points of reference were more  clearly outlined, they were less smothered by the mass of information brought  together, and the references to less-known forms of Yoga, such as the Tantric  and others, were more clearly pointed out.
In the new edition the scrupulous desire to omit nothing has led to the  admission of matter which cannot but give a feeling of contamination. Such are  the passages on the relations between Yoga and Shamanism and forms of sorcery,  necromancy, and even cannibalism present in the religious practices and in the  folklore and magic of the natives. Such relationships, even though so studied as  to establish the due distances and show the possible “degradations of an  ideology due to the incomprehension of the symbolism it contained” may be of  interest to the specialist, but they cannot but trouble those who are interested  in the superior and “eternal” content of Yoga. Such a reader would have  preferred that all such references had been either omitted or abbreviated to the  indispensable minimum. Problems of this kind have, moreover been already dealt  with by Eliade in another of his works, http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0691119422/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0691119422&linkCode=as2&tag=countecurrenp-20 , and the present references are often nothing but lengthy  repetitions. They could have been avoided, thus assuring the new book a  character of greater “purity.”
But for all this, the reader can clearly see here the supreme purpose of the  true Yoga, which is the attainment of immortality, the “deconditioning” of the  human being, absolute freedom, the active attainment of the “unconditioned.”  Students of these subjects well know that in Yoga, as in Indian metaphysics in  general and still more clearly in Buddhism, immortality has a quite special  meaning. In a certain sense, every man is immortal, for according to the  doctrine under consideration, death does not end him, but his life is reproduced  in an indefinite series of rebirths. The purpose of Yoga is to destroy this  immortality, replacing it by that pertaining to a state free from all  conditionality, whether cosmic or divine.
Eliade calls attention to the fact that existence in the heavens, divine  life, what in Western religions is conceived of as Paradise, would seem, judged  by this standard, to be a temptation and an arrest: one must place oneself at a  point beyond all this. In this connection he might perhaps have quoted the  Sutta of the “Visit on Brahma” of the Majjhimonikaya, where this  idea finds its grandest expression. Attention is also called to the part  “cognition” plays in the achievement of Yoga, which confers on this achievement  a character that might be described as “Olympian.” The meaning of cognition as  understood by Yoga is indeed that of a “mere awakening producing nothing, which  gives immediate revelation of reality,” that is to say, of the true nature of  the ego, and which thus sets free (p. 42). It is therefore the opposite of a  “conquest” understood in the Faustian and activistic sense, and this should be  realized by many modern Western sympathizers with yoga who are following a wrong  path.
The opposition between the yoga experience and the mystic experience is  dearly shown by Eliade. Although he uses the word “mystic” (see also the  subtitle of his previous book) in speaking of several matters connected with  Yoga, this point is clearly noted by the use he makes of an original expression  “enstasy” instead of ecstasy (see pp. 89 ff). “Yoga is not a technique of  ecstasy; on the contrary, it endeavors to realize complete concentration, to  attain enstasy.” As the meaning of “ecstasy” is “out-standing” so the meaning of  “enstasy” is “in-standing,” a return to the metaphysical center of one’s own  being as though resuming possession of a throne that has been deserted through  that mysterious transcendental fact that Hindu tradition designates by the  expression maya. While Eliade stresses this opposition particularly in  the case of shamanism, it holds good morphologically also for the relations  between Yoga and mysticism.
Thus Eliade interprets as “enstasy” samadhi itself, the ultimate aim  of classical Yoga. And he thus also overcomes the idea of those who, knowing  nothing of experiences of this kind, believe that this ultimate term is a kind  of trance, a condition of reduced consciousness, almost of unconsciousness (“a  zero point between consciousness and unconsciousness” as Rhys Davids said  referring to nirvana), whereas it is really a state of  super-consciousness. The strange thing is that not only Westerners have fallen  into so gross an error. We have, for instance, seen D. T. Suzuki suggest an  interpretation of this kind (even if in defense of Zen as a specific tendency)  in relation to the Yoga of Samkhya and similar mahayanic doctrines.
It would perhaps have been useful to develop in this field a comparison  between the horizons of Yoga and those of psychoanalysis. All those Westerners  who believe they have made such an extraordinary discovery with their  psychoanalysis (Jung goes as far as to assert presumptuously, that  psychoanalysis alone makes “scientific” understanding of the learning of the  East possible) should realize that the positive side of psychoanalysis had been  previously discovered centuries and centuries before, by Yoga as part of a full  knowledge of man, and not of that mutilated, deformed, and contaminated  anthropology, which provides the basis of Freudianism and of all its more or  less orthodox derivatives.
Reservations must, however, be made as regards that which arouses the Yoga  vocation. From the external, historical point of view it is true that Yoga arose  from the need of a practical (and we would add: active) experience of sacred  things and as a reaction against metaphysical speculations and fossilized  ritual. But when it comes to the existentialist motive, we are far from agreeing  with Eliade when he writes: “Freedom from suffering, that is the  principal aim of all Hindu philosophies and all Hindu mysticism” (p. 26). It  may appear to be so if only the more popular exoteric aspects of the teaching  are taken into account. But this is not true even of Buddhism, as we have shown  in one of our works (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0892815531/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0892815531&linkCode=as2&tag=countecurrenp-20  [London, 1951], pp. 59 ff.); after Stcherbatsky had already shown  (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0007BOF4E/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=B0007BOF4E&linkCode=as2&tag=countecurrenp-20  [London, 1906]) that a deeper meaning could be given to duhka  than the vulgar one of “pain.” The very word klicta applied to states  of consciousness to be suppressed by the practice of Yoga, properly means  “impure” (in a metaphysical, not in a moral sense) and does not mean “painful.”  The real starting point of Yoga (and of Buddhism itself) is the reaction of a  soul aspiring to the absolute as against a contingent, unstable existence,  conditioned by agitation, subject to change, existence that includes in its  emotional aspects both pain and pleasure and even the beatitude of the most  radiant celestial gods. What Eliade states is therefore incorrect, although the  book contains matter enough to lead us to a just view of things.
The use in the early chapters of the book of a “vegetative” analogy to  describe the Yogic mode of existence, also seems to us unsuitable. Recourse to a  “mineral” analogy would be better suited. It would better express Yogic  immobility, the “arrest of the flow,” the concentration of consciousness on  “being” as opposed to “life,” and its ritual expressions also: the immobility of  the asana, the impassiveness of the features, etc.
It would perhaps be better, when dealing with the state of existence that has  to be overcome, not to introduce the notion of “history,” an exclusively Western  notion, which finds no match in the world of Hindu metaphysics. In it, as we  know, the basic idea is, instead, that of samsara, of purely irrational  becoming, which differs widely from the notion of “history” and even from the  simple condition of temporality for, in the Hindu conception, samsara and  the world of maya are also inclusive of states in which time, as we know  it, is non-existent. We have made this remark because Eliade has a special  personal notion of his own, which, though it supplies a valuable and legitimate  key for the interpretation of many things in the world of myths and rites, is  not applicable to all cases. We are dealing with the motive of the destruction  of “history” by the return to the prehistoric and a-temporal state of the  origins. This scheme can be applied wherever cyclical structures are in  evidence. We do not think there is much place for it in the Yoga field. Eliade  himself has what is really at issue, i.e., a “break of the level,” not only of  the level of human, historical experience, whether individual or collective, but  also of the cosmic level. The legitimate point of reference is, therefore, that  of a doctrine of the multiple states of being, seen as a vertical system,  whereas the idea of a pre-temporal (prehistoric) origin implies always a  residuum of “horizontalism.” At a certain point in samsara there is an  arrest; after which one proceeds not so much backwards as upwards, liberating  oneself from all conditioning circumstances. A metaphysical itinerary, this,  which in the ancient Western civilization was expressed by the symbolism of the  journey through successive planetary spheres and the progressive “unclothing”  that took place in each of them while an equivalent of this is given in the  Tantric Yoga by the ascent of consciousness transported by the power of the  kundalini through the seven chakras. 
We have referred to Tantrism, and one of the principal merits of Eliade’s  book is that it has dealt fully with this current of Indian spirituality, still  little known in the West and which when it has been studied has been generally  decried because of its connection with sex magic rites and the use of women.  While remaining faithful to the style of “neutral” exposition, more especially  in this matter, Eliade suggests the key to interpretations of undoubted value,  based always on extensive documentary evidence, as when dealing with the rites  of “transubstantiation,” “polyvalent languages,” etc. So also on the matter of  “hyperphysical physiology” or “subtle physiology,” which plays an important part  in Tantric Yoga, Eliade holds himself afar from the materializing opinions  formulated by some Orientalists and some physicians who are ignorant of the very  principles underlying such notions.
But as Tantric Yoga follows a course which differs widely from that followed  by classical Yoga, it would seem likely that important results might have been  obtained by engaging in research on typological and morphological lines. It  seems to us that in several cases the different forms of Yoga arise not only  from technical differences but from a difference in the spirit that inspires  them. The background, which is to some extent immanentistic, of Tantric  practices differs substantially from the transcendent one of the Yoga of strict  type and of patanjalian orientation. Jnana Yoga and Hatha Yoga (taking the  latter in its deeper sense which is not that of “physical Yoga”) may have  definite differential implications in their general vision of the world (we have  referred to it in our work The Yoga of Power. We may set up the ideal of  liberation against the more positive one of liberty (and here we may refer to  the Tantric Siddha and the Kaula whose antinomianism has precedents in some  veins of the most ancient Upanishads and Brahmanic literature). The stress laid  on the importance of the body in its esoteric aspect may also afford a clue,  while it is quite clear that the process of conferring cosmic sense on the body  may have a significance of its own which must be referred back to the  spirituality of the Vedic origins, and contrasts with the ascetic trends on a  dualistic background.
These considerations lead us to the much debated problem of the origins of  Yoga. It would seem that Eliade is inclined to believe in a non-Indo-European,  non-“Aryan” origin. In his first book, this view was more stressed and was  extended to cover not only Yoga but part of Hindu ascetic tendencies in general.  As is known, some inquirers with racial views had already formulated the theory  that all forms of asceticism and practices of mortification of the flesh were  foreign—artfremd—to the spirituality of the Aryan conquerors of India,  and that all such notions in Hinduism should be traced back to exogenous  influences and to a world-outlook no less foreign—artfremd. At first the  reference made here was to Dravidian and Kosalian natives; later on the question  arose of the archaic civilization brought to light by the excavations at  Mohenjo-Daro. It is claimed that among the objects found at Mohenjo-Daro there  are figures in the postures—asana—of Yogis and ascetics, along with  divinities who are not found in the Vedas, while they play an important part in  many currents of Yogic and ascetic but also devotional intonation of the later  period. All this strikes us as rather problematic for we consider that in such  matters morphological considerations must be decisive. Eliade writes: “Yoga, in  so far as it represents a reaction against ritualism and scholastic speculation,  belongs to the aboriginal tradition and conflicts with the Indo-European [i.e.  Aryan] religious heritage” (p. 356). He adds “We should remember that the  absence of the Yoga complex in other Indo-European peoples would confirm that  this technique is a product of the Asian soil of the Indian territory” (ibid.).  All this is not quite right. As regards the first point, we may note that early  Buddhism was also a reaction to ritualism and speculation, but it was of purely  Aryan origin, starting with the person of its founder. For the rest, the  consideration of historical metaphysics must be introduced in a morphological  framework that we have already outlined elsewhere (in the already quoted http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0892815531/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0892815531&linkCode=as2&tag=countecurrenp-20  and also in our http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/089281506X/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=089281506X&linkCode=as2&tag=countecurrenp-20 ). Account must be taken of that regression of mankind from the  spirituality of the origins, to which the traditions of all peoples bear witness  and to which, indeed, Eliade himself makes frequent reference in the course of  his researches. As a result of this regression, states of spirituality which in  the beginning had an almost natural character and were at the basis of a  sacramental and ritual conception of the world, were later on attained only  exceptionally as the result of ascetic and violent practices. In our opinion  this is the historical place of Yoga also, as spirit. In other  Indo-European traditions it is matched by the Mysteries and initiation practices  which, though varying widely in form and method, have the like significance of  an experimental opus restaurationis and occupy the same position of Yoga  when considered in relation to the origins. It may be that in the framework of  Hindu spirituality, the transition to a phase of this kind, which corresponds to  Yoga, was favored by exogenous influences: favored, not determined.  Beyond possible exterior resemblances of themes, we must consider the  possibility that, when passing from one civilization to another, they acquired a  widely different meaning. Thus, for instance, it seems pretty certain that the  Mohenjo-Daro civilization was essentially a “Mother civilization,” a  civilization of the “Divine Woman” with a tellurian or lunar background  belonging morphologically to the same cycle of southern, paleo-Mediterranean,  and even South-American civilizations. The classic spirit of Yoga is, on the  other hand, exclusively virile and uranic. We have knowledge of an asceticism  which was known also to the Mother civilizations (from the Maya to the  Babylonians). But it had a character of mortification which is quite absent from  Yoga. Even the central theme of that civilization, the Divine Woman, revives in  Hinduism, through the Tantric metaphysics, in a strongly spiritualized form  which would be unaccountable if it be not related to the Aryan heritage and to  the Upanishads themselves, while its original features survive only in the  reemergence of popular orgiastic or devotional cults.
The examination of those problems would lead us far afield. But in any case  it seems to us that Yoga should be considered only as an integral part of  Indo-European spirituality of the purest kind. For this reason also it seems to  us that the search for relations with the drosses of Shamanism as they are  present in the origins of the Aryan peoples. Or elsewhere, is of no interest.  The only thing of interest, as we have said, is the definition of the autonomous  features of a spiritual phenomenon which should be examined there where it arose  in conformity with its “idea” and therefore in its typical imperfection,  liberating itself from empirical conditioning factors.
After this glance at the contents of Eliade’s new book we are tempted to  inquire of him a somewhat prejudicial question: to whom is the book addressed?  As we have openly declared, it is a fundamental work for specialists in the  field not only of Oriental research, but also in that of the history of  religions. But in his introduction Eliade states that the book is addressed also  to a wider public and he speaks of the importance that a knowledge of a doctrine  such as that of Yoga may have for the solution of the existential problems of  the modern Westerner, confirmed as that doctrine is by immemorial  experience.
Here complications arise. To meet such a purpose it would be necessary to  follow a different plan and to treat the matter in a different way. A Westerner  who reads Eliade’s book may be able to acquire an idea of Yoga as “la  science intégrale de l’homme [the integral science of man],” he  may acquire knowledge of a teaching that has faced in practice as well as in  theory the problem of “deconditioning” man; he will thus add yet one other  panorama to the list of the many modern culture has provided him with. His  interest will perhaps be more lively than the “neutral” interest of the  specialist; he may flirt with the aspects of a “spiritualite virante.”  But on the existential plane the situation will be pretty much the same as it  was before, even if the information available be deeper, more accurate, better  documented. The possibility of exercising a more direct influence could only be  looked for from a book addressed to those who have shown an interest in Yoga and  similar sciences not because they seek for information but because they are  seeking for a path; a book that in this special field would remove the  misunderstandings, the popular notions, the deviations, and the delusions spread  by a certain kind of literature to which we referred at the beginning of this  article; a book displaying the accuracy and knowledge that we find in this work  of Eliade, in as far as it is an exposition kept within the limits of the  history of religions. Such a book has perhaps still to be written. But even so  the essential need would not be met, for it is the unanimous opinion of the true  masters of Yoga that the key to their science cannot be handed on by the written  word. 
		
	
		
		
		
			
				  
				
 
 
 
			 
		
		
		
		
		
 
  
   
  
			
			
			
			
				 
			
			
			
			
			
			
				
			
			
		 
		
	
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			Mircea Eliade (Romanian: [ˈmirt͡ʃe̯a eliˈade]; March 9 [O.S. February 24] 1907 – April 22, 1986) was a Romanian historian of religion, fiction writer, philosopher, and professor at the University of Chicago. He was a leading interpreter of religious experience, who established paradigms in religious studies that persist to this day. His theory that hierophanies form the basis of religion, splitting the human experience of reality into sacred and profane space and time, has proved influential.[1] One of his most influential contributions to religious studies was his theory of Eternal Return, which holds that myths and rituals do not simply commemorate hierophanies, but, at least to the minds of the religious, actually participate in them.[1] 
 
His literary works belong to the fantastic and autobiographical genres. The best known are the novels Maitreyi ("La Nuit Bengali" or "Bengal Nights"), Noaptea de Sânziene ("The Forbidden Forest"), Isabel și apele diavolului ("Isabel and the Devil's Waters") and Romanul Adolescentului Miop ("Novel of the Nearsighted Adolescent"), the novellas Domnișoara Christina ("Miss Christina") and Tinerețe fără tinerețe ("Youth Without Youth"), and the short stories Secretul doctorului Honigberger ("The Secret of Dr. Honigberger") and La Țigănci ("With the Gypsy Girls"). 
 
Early in his life, Eliade was a noted journalist and essayist, a disciple of Romanian far right philosopher and journalist Nae Ionescu, and a member of the literary society Criterion. He also served as cultural attaché to the United Kingdom and Portugal. Several times during the late 1930s, Eliade publicly expressed his support for the Iron Guard, a fascist and antisemitic political organization. His political involvement at the time, as well as his other far right connections, were frequently criticised after World War II. 
 
Noted for his vast erudition, Eliade had fluent command of five languages (Romanian, French, German, Italian, and English) and a reading knowledge of three others (Hebrew, Persian, and Sanskrit). He was elected a posthumous member of the Romanian Academy. 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
			
				  
				
 
 
 
			 
		
		
		 
		
					
				
   					
				
							
					
				
					
					
					
					
				
				
				
				
						
			
		
		
 
 
 
 
 
		
	
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			Mircea Eliade (Romanian: [ˈmirt͡ʃe̯a eliˈade]; March 9 [O.S. February 24] 1907 – April 22, 1986) was a Romanian historian of religion, fiction writer, philosopher, and professor at the University of Chicago. He was a leading interpreter of religious experience, who established paradigms in religious studies that persist to this day. His theory that hierophanies form the basis of religion, splitting the human experience of reality into sacred and profane space and time, has proved influential.[1] One of his most influential contributions to religious studies was his theory of Eternal Return, which holds that myths and rituals do not simply commemorate hierophanies, but, at least to the minds of the religious, actually participate in them.[1] 
 
His literary works belong to the fantastic and autobiographical genres. The best known are the novels Maitreyi ("La Nuit Bengali" or "Bengal Nights"), Noaptea de Sânziene ("The Forbidden Forest"), Isabel și apele diavolului ("Isabel and the Devil's Waters") and Romanul Adolescentului Miop ("Novel of the Nearsighted Adolescent"), the novellas Domnișoara Christina ("Miss Christina") and Tinerețe fără tinerețe ("Youth Without Youth"), and the short stories Secretul doctorului Honigberger ("The Secret of Dr. Honigberger") and La Țigănci ("With the Gypsy Girls"). 
 
Early in his life, Eliade was a noted journalist and essayist, a disciple of Romanian far right philosopher and journalist Nae Ionescu, and a member of the literary society Criterion. He also served as cultural attaché to the United Kingdom and Portugal. Several times during the late 1930s, Eliade publicly expressed his support for the Iron Guard, a fascist and antisemitic political organization. His political involvement at the time, as well as his other far right connections, were frequently criticised after World War II. 
 
Noted for his vast erudition, Eliade had fluent command of five languages (Romanian, French, German, Italian, and English) and a reading knowledge of three others (Hebrew, Persian, and Sanskrit). He was elected a posthumous member of the Romanian Academy. 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
			
				  
				
 
 
 
			 
		
		
		 
		
					
				
   					
				
							
					
				
					
					
					
					
				
				
				
				
						
			
		
		
 
 
 
 
 
		
	
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			02-02-2015
			
							
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			 Mircea Eliade (1907-1986) born in Bucharest, Romania and was educated as a philosopher lectured in the Ecole des Hautes-Etudes of the Sorbonne. He is author of Yoga: Immortality and Freedom 
 
"Yoga, as a 'science' of achieving this transformation of finite man into the infinite One, has to be recognized as something intrinsically Indian or, as 'a specific dimension of the Indian mind."  
 
"Yoga constitutes a characteristic dimension of the Indian mind, to such a point that whatever Indian religion and culture have made their way, we also find a more or less pure form of Yoga. In India, Yoga was adopted and valorized by all religious movements, whether Hinduist or 'heretical.' The various Christian or syncretistic Yogas of modern India constitutes another proof  that Indian religious experience finds the yogic methods of "meditation" and "concentration" a necessity.  
 
"Yoga had to meet all the deepest needs of the Indian soul. In the universal history of mysticism, Yoga occupies a place of its own, and one that is difficult to define. It represents a living fossil, a modality of archaic spirituality that has survived nowhere else. Yoga takes over and continues the immemorial symbolism of initiation; in other words, it finds its place in a universal tradition of the religious history of mankind." "From the Upanishads onward, India has been seriously preoccupied with but one great problem - the structure of the human condition. With a rigor unknown elsewhere, India has applied itself to analyzing the various conditionings of the human being." 
 
"The conquest of this absolute freedom, or perfect spontaneity, is the goal of all Indian philosophies and mystical techniques; but it is above all through Yoga, through one of the many forms of Yoga, that India has held that it can be assured." 
 
"Yoga is present everywhere - no less in the oral tradition of India than in the Sanskrit and vernacular literature....To such a degree is this true that Yoga has ended by becoming a characteristic dimension of Indian spirituality." 
 
(source:  Yoga: Immortality and Freedom - by Mircea Eliade p. xvi - xx and 101 and 359-364). 
 
Commenting on history which has no metaphysical significance for either Hinduism or Buddhism, he states that:  
 
"Profane time must be abolished, at least symbolically, so that man forgets his "historical situation". The highest human ideal is the jivamukta - one who is liberated from Time. Man, according to the Indian view, 'must, at all costs, find in his world a road that issues upon a tran-historical and atemporal plane.'  
 
(source: The Speaking Tree: A Study of Indian Culture and Society - By Richard Lannoy p. 292). For more on Mircea Eliade refer to chapter on Yoga and Hindu Philosophy).  
 
 
 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
			
				  
				
 
 
 
			 
		
		
		 
		
					
				
   					
				
							
					
				
					
					
					
					
				
				
				
				
						
			
		
		
 
 
 
 
 
		
	
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