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Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalWho am I? Am I a human trying to know the Truth, or am I the Truth experiencing a human order? Am I a definition trying to know what lies in the ocean of That which is undefined, or am I That Undefined perceiving a body of definition? Am I limited and trying to fathom the seemingly limitless existence, or am I the Unlimited observing limitedness by the very act of observation? What was before me? What will be after me? What are my first memories? How far can I remember? Can I recall the moment when I was born? Did all this which I call ‘life’ really unfold exactly like how I imagined during childhood, youth, middle-age or old age? Will I be able to observe the perishing of this body? Will the observation that ‘I’ carry also cease?
Is there a true path to liberation? What is liberation?
The Awakening of Vishnu explores eternal concepts of Aryavart such as:
• Absolute and relative bliss
• The observer and the field of observation
• Atma as Jeev-atma and Param-atma
• Shakti as Maya
• The paradox of reality
• The grand paradox of liberation
It brings forth the complete translations of Adhyatm Upanishad and Akulveer Tantra.
Prashant Saxena
Prashant Saxena has translated many ancient Sanskrit texts like Yog Sutras, Bhagavad Gita, Ashtavakr Gita, Vijnan Bhairav Tantra, Kaivalya Upanishad, Garbh Upanishad, etc., and authored books like Eye of Shiva, Scroll of Ashtavakr and Return of the Divine Mother. He has been pursuing Indian science since a very early age. Brought up in a family of doctors who themselves are rooted in ancient Indian wisdom and have an affinity for science, he has observed closely the evolution of modern science and the various holistic perspectives on Indian knowledge. He is also the grandson of Dr. Veerbala, a Sanskrit scholar and a teacher, and Dr. Dharamvir Bharti, the chief editor of the popular Hindi weekly magazine, Dharmayug, from 1960 to 1987, who was awarded Padma Shree for literature in 1972 by the Government of India.
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