Eastern Philosophy for Beginners

Rumi - Persian Scholar

21 min · 25 de nov de 2025
Portada del episodio Rumi - Persian Scholar

Descripción

Rumi was a 13th-century Persian Muslim poet, jurist, Islamic scholar, theologian, and Sufi mystic, known for his influential poetry that explores themes of love, union with the Divine, and spiritual journey. His works, written in Persian, have been widely translated and continue to transcend borders and cultures. He is revered for his universalist philosophy and ability to express profound spiritual concepts beautifully, often personifying God as the "beloved" and the human soul as the "lover" seeking a reunion. Selenius Media Inc

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8 episodios

episode Ibn Rushd - Jurist and Thinker artwork

Ibn Rushd - Jurist and Thinker

Today we cross the Strait of Gibraltar in our imagination and walk into twelfth‑century Córdoba, where books are copied by lamplight, law is argued in courtyards, and the moon above the Great Mosque looks like a coin balanced on the city’s palm. Our guide is Ibn Rushd, known in Latin as Averroes—judge, court physician, and the most relentless reader Aristotle ever had in Arabic. If al‑Ghazālī asked whether reason had forgotten its limits, Ibn Rushd asked whether faith had forgotten its confidence in reason. He will try to show us that properly used, reason is not a rival to revelation but its ally, that the law doesn’t only permit inquiry but commands it of those fit to carry it, and that a society which treats thinking as a vice is a society teaching itself to lose. He was born in 1126 to a family of jurists; the law was his cradle language. Córdoba in his youth was an Andalusian capital with libraries large enough to make a boy greedy for paper. He studied the Malikī school of jurisprudence, mathematics, medicine, theology, and—quietly at first—Greek philosophy as it had flowed into Arabic through centuries of translation and commentary. The city’s scholars remembered Aristotle by many names; Ibn Rushd would come to be called simply “The Commentator,” and the definite article tells you everything about the reputation that followed him. Produced by Selenius Media – Music by The Artificial Laboratory.

27 de nov de 202512 min
episode Guru Nanak - First Guru artwork

Guru Nanak - First Guru

He was born in a village called Talwandi, now Nankana Sahib, near Lahore, in a world turbulent enough to make meaning a daily need. The Delhi Sultanate was fading; new powers pressed from the northwest; local chiefs fenced and bargained; merchants moved along roads that laced together Kabul, Multan, Delhi, and the ports of Gujarat; farmers worked river soils that could flood and feed in the same year. Nanak’s father, Mehta Kalyan Das, wanted a practical son—one who would tend accounts, marry, and secure the household. His mother, Mata Tripta, and his older sister, Bebe Nanaki, saw in the boy a gaze that rested more easily on people than on coin. Stories, polished by affection, say that when the local priest tried to place the sacred thread around the child’s neck, he asked whether a thread that stains, snaps, and burns can secure a soul. Better, he said, to wear an inner thread of truth and compassion. Whether the exchange was exactly as remembered, the point is clear: Nanak’s religion would not be about marks on a body; it would be about the way a life is carried. Niklas Osterman MA

25 de nov de 202526 min
episode Dōgen Zenji - Japanese Zen Buddhist monk, writer, poet, philosopher artwork

Dōgen Zenji - Japanese Zen Buddhist monk, writer, poet, philosopher

Today we slip off our sandals, step into a plain wooden hall, and sit facing a wall. No incense drama, no sermon to memorize—just breath, posture, and a silence thick as rain. Our guide is Dōgen (1200–1253), founder of the Sōtō school of Zen in Japan, the monk who told his students that “practice” and “realization” are not two things, that to sit is already to awaken, that time is not a river we watch pass but the very way our being happens. He left palaces and arguments to build a community in the mountains where cooking rice, sweeping floors, and copying sutras were not chores on the way to enlightenment—they were the Way itself. If you’ve ever wondered whether the ordinary could be an altar, Dōgen will say yes, and then hand you a bowl and ask you to wash the rice as if it were the world. Selenius Media & Niklas Osterman

24 de nov de 202521 min
episode Mahavira - Ahisma & Liberation artwork

Mahavira - Ahisma & Liberation

Today we step into the dust and sunlight of the Gangetic plain, into a world where wandering renunciants moved from village to village with bowls in their hands and fire in their questions. Our guide is Mahavira, remembered by the Jain tradition as the twenty‑fourth Tirthankara, a “ford‑maker” who showed a crossing from the fast current of suffering to the far bank of liberation. If the Buddha traced a middle way between indulgence and self‑mortification, Mahavira proved how far human resolve can go in the name of harmlessness. He lived a life that to most of us seems impossibly strict—bare feet in the hot season and the cold, careful steps to avoid crushing an ant, a mouth covered to spare the gnat—and yet his vision was radiant with care. He taught that every living being, from the elephant to the unseen micro‑organism, is a center of experience; that harm echoes back on the one who harms; that freedom is not an idea but a discipline; and that truth itself has many sides. To understand him is to encounter an ethics that refuses to compromise with cruelty and a philosophy that trains the mind in humility. Produced by Selenius Media Inc & Niklas S Osterman, MA

24 de nov de 202525 min