| The Rebellious Spirit | Central to Osho’s vision of the New Man is what he calls "the rebellious spirit." |
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| Reflections on Khalil Gibran's The Prophet | Osho examines Gibran’s poetic explorations of life – and goes further. He looks at whether Gibran is “a mystic of the highest order,” simply a poet “who speaks in words of gold” – or perhaps an extraordinary mixture of the two. |
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| Returning to the Source | This book is a glorious mixture of no-nonsense Zen and sublime poetic mystery. |
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| Revolution in Education | Speaking of a crippled humanity, Osho points to education as a cause, saying how in the name of education man has been cut off from nature. |
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| The Revolution | A fiery book alive with Osho’s love for Kabir and for the only revolution that counts: enlightenment. |
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| Rinzai: Master of the Irrational | Capturing the unpredictable, dynamite essence of Zen, Osho speaks on Master Rinzai – who is truly a master of the irrational. |
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| Sat-Chit-Anand: Truth-Consciousness-Bliss | Osho emphasizes the treasures of the inner world, and the urgent need for the quantum leap from mind to being. |
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| Satyam Shivam Sundaram: Truth Godliness Beauty | An invitation by Osho to discover that the more comfortable we are with being ourselves, the easier it is to go beyond ourselves – to be able to relax, meditate, laugh at ourselves and enjoy our lives each and every moment. |
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| The Search | Osho talks on the ten paintings that tell the famous Zen story of a farmer in search of his lost bull, providing an allegorical expression of the search for enlightenment. |
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| The Secret of Secrets | Osho speaks on the magical sutras of Master Lu-tsu, which he describes as …”a flowering of the Taoist approach to life and existence". |
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| The Secret | Osho uses a selection of delightful, ancient stories to impart the essence of authentic love. |
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| Secrets of Yoga | Introducing Patanjali’s sutras as scientific methods for allowing all that is not essential within us to die – that is, to die as a false entity of the ego. |
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| Seeds of Wisdom | A collection of 120 letters written by Osho. Intimate, simple, and laced with personal anecdotes and insights. |
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| Sermons in Stones | Answering seeker’s questions Osho explores the theme of the individual’s responsibility in creating the world we live in. |
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| Showering without Clouds | Osho talks on Sahajo, an enlightened woman from eighteenth-century Rajasthan, about what it means to be a woman and a seeker. |
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| Socrates Poisoned Again After 25 Centuries | In these talks, delivered in Greece, Osho revives the spirit of Zorba in a series of lively talks to his disciples and to visiting journalists. |
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| The Song of Ecstasy | Osho speaks on Adi Shankaracharya, the enlightened mystic of eighth-century India, a formidable scholar who can sing his song of ecstasy and dance his joy in life. |
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| A Sudden Clash of Thunder | While the theme of these talks is meditation – watching, and remaining alert and aware – Osho encourages us first to “be happy and meditation will follow”. |
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| Sufis: The People of the Path, Vol. 1 | Jokes – paradox – parables – wisdom – absurdity – all to shake the reader out of his intellect and into the innocence of the mystic. |
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| Sufis: The People of the Path, Vol. 2 | Osho takes some beautiful traditional Sufi stories and uses them as tools to chip away at the obsolete and blind belief systems in which modern man is ensnared. |
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| The Sun Rises in the Evening | These commentaries on sutras, alternating with answers to questions, are richly laced with stories and anecdotes about Krishnamurti, Plato, Socrates, Hubert Benoit, etc... |
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| The Supreme Doctrine | The Supreme Doctrine deals in depth with many aspects of meditation – of how to move intensely and totally into this experience spoken of by the seers in the Ken Upanishad. |
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| The Sword and the Lotus | This volume captures the fast pace of Osho’s six-week stay in Nepal. He answers questions from seekers in his hotel suite in the mornings and from the press every evening. |
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| Talking Tao | The greatest miracle in life is love, and it is the greatest mystery also; greater than life itself, because love is the very essence for which life exists. |
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| The Tantra Experience | An absorbing book about the relationship between Saraha, an affluent young Brahmin, and a lower-cast arrowsmith woman – he as disciple and she as his Tantric master. |
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