Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book
Author White, David Gordon

Title The alchemical body : Siddha traditions in medieval India / David Gordon White
Published Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 1996

Copies

Description 1 online resource (xviii, 596 pages) : illustrations
Contents 1. Indian Paths to Immortality -- 2. Categories of Indian Thought: The Universe by Numbers -- 3. The Prehistory of Tantric Alchemy -- 4. Sources for the History of Tantric Alchemy in India -- 5. Tantric and Siddha Alchemical Literature -- 6. Tantra in the Rasarnava -- 7. Corresponding Hierarchies: The Substance of the Alchemical Body -- 8. Homologous Structures of the Alchemical Body -- 9. The Dynamics of Transformation in Siddha Alchemy -- 10. Penetration, Perfection, and Immortality -- Epilogue: The Siddha Legacy in Modern India
Summary "Beginning in the fifth century A.D., various Indian mystics began to innovate a body of techniques with which to render themselves immortal. These people called themselves Siddhas, a term formerly reserved for a class of demigods, revered by Hindus and Buddhists alike, who were known to inhabit mountaintops or the atmospheric regions. Over the following five to eight hundred years, three types of Hindu Siddha orders emerged, each with its own specialized body of practice. These were the Siddha Kaula, whose adherents sought bodily immortality through erotico-mystical practices; the Rasa Siddhas, medieval India's alchemists, who sought to transmute their flesh-and-blood bodies into immortal bodies through the ingestion of the mineral equivalents of the sexual fluids of the god Siva and his consort, the Goddess; and the Nath Siddhas, whose practice of hatha yoga projected the sexual and laboratory practices of the Siddha Kaula and Rasa Siddhas upon the internal grid of the subtle body. For India's medieval Siddhas, these three conjoined types of practice led directly to bodily immortality, supernatural powers, and self-divinization; in a word, to the exalted status of the semidivine Siddhas of the older popular cults."
"In The Alchemical Body, David Gordon White excavates and centers within its broader Indian context this lost tradition of the medieval Siddhas. Working from a body of previously unexplored alchemical sources, he demonstrates for the first time that the medieval disciplines of Hindu alchemy and hatha yoga were practiced by one and the same people, and that they can only be understood when viewed together. Human sexual fluids and the structures of the subtle body are microcosmic equivalents of the substances and apparatus manipulated by the alchemist in his laboratory. With these insights, White opens the way to a new and more comprehensive understanding of the entire sweep of medieval Indian mysticism, within the broader context of south Asian Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Islam." "This book is an essential reference for anyone interested in Indian yoga, alchemy, and the medieval beginnings of science."--Jacket
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 521-554) and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Siddhas.
Alchemy -- Religious aspects -- Tantrism
Alchemy -- History -- To 1500
Hatha yoga.
Tantrism.
Nātha sect.
Alchemy.
Medicine -- Religious aspects.
Medicine, Medieval.
Hinduism -- history
Medicine, Ayurvedic
Alchemy
Buddhism -- history
Religion and Medicine
History, Medieval
History, Ancient
alchemy.
tantrism (ideology)
RELIGION -- Comparative Religion.
Medicine -- Religious aspects
Medicine, Medieval
Alchemy
Hatha yoga
Nātha sect
Siddhas
Tantrism
Tantrismus
Alchemie
Siddha
Alchemie.
Yoga.
Tantrisme.
Yoga, Siddha -- Histoire -- Moyen-Age.
Alchimie -- Inde -- Histoire -- Moyen-Age.
Tantrisme -- Inde -- Histoire -- Moyen-Age.
Sectes hindoues -- Inde.
Nāths -- Inde.
Yoga, Hatha.
India
Indien
Inde -- Histoire religieuse -- Moyen-Age.
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780226149349
022614934X