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This book sheds new light on the fascinating – at times dark and at times hopeful – reception of classical Yoga philosophies in Germany during the nineteenth century.
"Owen Ware's instructive and at times even entertaining study of the reception of Yoga philosophy in nineteenth century Germany is a valuable contribution to current attempts to look beyond overly narrow constructions of the philosophical canon. And the final chapter, which addresses the early twentieth century Calcutta philosophers is an important addition to the study of world philosophies."
Robert Bernasconi, Penn State University, USA
"The monolithic civilizational narrative of “Western philosophy” is undergoing serious critical reflection, and Owen Ware builds on existing scholarship and offers further revision in this study. Following “yoga” down its pathways in post-Enlightenment German philosophy, Ware offers an accessible account of the cross-cultural anxiety of influence that lingers in modern philosophy, and—even more importantly—an account of the South Asian intellectuals who came to know this narrative and answered in no uncertain terms."
Bradley L. Herling, Marymount Manhattan College, USA
Introduction Part 1: Indian Pantheism and the Threat of Nihilism 1. The Perils of Pantheism: Schlegel and Karoline von Günderrode 2. The Song of God: Humboldt’s Philosophical Poem 3. “Abstract Devotion”: Yoga in Hegel and Schelling Part 2: God, Morality, and Freedom 4. Yoga in the Late Nineteenth Century: Pal, Mitra, Vivekananda, and Müller 5. The Bengali Philosophers: Dasgupta, Radhakrishnan, and Bhattacharyya Conclusion. Yoga, the “True Proteus” Appendix. Images of India: Voltaire and Herder
Owen Ware is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toronto. His previous books include Fichte’s Moral Philosophy (2020), Kant’s Justification of Ethics (2021), and Kant on Freedom (2023).