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Nehru Centre Event: Literalism, Steam Engines and the Vedas: On the Interpretation of Hindu Sacred Texts

Nehru Centre Event
Thursday, 20 October 2011 - 6:30pm to 7:30pm

Dr Rembert Lutjeharms

 
How do we understand and apply the teachings of centuries-old texts today? How do we make their teachings, grounded in a social structure that no longer exists, relevant in our modern world? How do we interpret these ideas in the light of contemporary science? In recent decades, the interpretation of sacred texts has become not just the pursuit of a few scholars and theologians in the academies and religious institutions but have become the focus of public debate. How do Hindu sacred texts relate to this discussion?

Friends Event: One-Day Course

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 15 October 2011 - 9:30am to 5:30pm

Cost: £50 including lunch

 
For more information and bookings contact Ramila Chauhan on 07801 241296 or lf@ochs.org.uk
 
Session One: The Origins and History of the Hindu Religion
In this session we will first look at different views on the origins of the Hindu religion, noting the importance of the Vedas and the significance of the ancient culture of the Indus Valley. We will then explore the way in which the history of India has had an influence on its religious culture, noting in particular the impact of foreign invasions and foreign rule.
 
Session Two: The Hindu Scriptures
In

OCHS alumnus awarded

In January, Exploring the Bhagavad gita: Philosophy, Structure and Meaning a new book by OCHS alumnus, Dr Ithamar Theodor, was named a Choice Outstanding Academic Title for 2011.

Every year in their January issue, Choice a magazine representing the 35,000 libraries who are part of the American Academic Libraries Association, publishes a list of Outstanding Academic Titles that they reviewed during the previous year.

‘Theodor writes with a fine mind and a great heart, both of which are essential for delving into this ancient work’s profound teachings,’ Choice magazine commented in its

OCHS Conference 2011: The Shakta Traditions

We now have a third conference to add to our list of achievements. The Sakta conference which took place on 10–11 September 2011 was highly successful with over fifty participants and twelve specialist scholars.

The conference was held in collaboration with the section for the Study of Religion, Aarhus University and the project leaders were Professor Gavin Flood (OCHS) and Bjarne Wernicke Olesen (Aarhus University). The Nehru Centre very kindly provided funding for the conference.

Friends Event: Yoga and Hinduism

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 24 September 2011 - 7:00pm to 9:00pm

Today many millions of people in the Western world and in India practice some form of Yoga. It is well known that Yoga originates in India but the relationship with Hindu religious teachings is frequently misunderstood. In this talk Nick Sutton will consider the relationship between Yoga and Hindu teachings and show how Yoga should properly be understood as an expression of Hindu spirituality.

Friends Event: What is progress? What is the goal? Indian insights on the world’s oldest questions

Nehru Centre Event
Monday, 19 September 2011 - 6:30pm to 7:30pm

A talk by Dr Nicholas Sutton of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies.

One of the notable features of modernity is the conflict that emerges between ‘extreme religion’ and ‘extreme materialism.’ A careful study of Indian thought, however, reveals a different approach to life based on the need to strike a balance and to develop a mood of tolerance towards other religious views.

Friends Event: Quantum Physics and Hinduism

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 27 August 2011 - 7:00pm to 9:00pm

A talk by by Sachin Nandha of The WeComeOne Group

 
Hinduism has always explored and identified with the subtlety of the universe, and ultimately our own nature. Hindu thinkers have never been convinced of a clock-like mechanical universe, and therefore all that is in it, including human beings. Western science through the “enlightenment” has always looked to mechanise the universe, and human beings with it. Only recently, in the last century have physicists begun to explore Quantum levels of our existence to discover the beauty and subtlety of everything around us.

Nehru Centre Event: Vedantists, Buddhists and Jains

Nehru Centre Event
Thursday, 18 August 2011 - 6:30pm to 8:30pm

A talk by Dr Nicholas Sutton

 
Considering the interrelationship between three of the world’s major religions, Nick Sutton will explore the crucial questions of religious tolerance and religious co-existence. Dr Sutton will also consider the insights offered by the Upanishads and the influence that Upanishadic teachings have had on the intellectual and spiritual development of humanity.

Nehru Centre Event: Vedantists, Buddhists, and Jains

Nehru Centre Event
Thursday, 18 August 2011 - 6:30pm to 7:30pm

A talk by Dr Nicholas Sutton of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies.

 
Considering the interrelationship between three of the world’s major religions, Nick Sutton will explore the crucial questions of religious tolerance and religious co-existence. Dr Sutton will also consider the insights offered by the Upanishads and the influence that Upanishadic teachings have had on the intellectual and spiritual development of humanity as a whole.

Youth of Nepalese Hindu Forum, UK visit the OCHS

Karma Yoga. Jnana Yoga. Bhakti Yoga. Doing, Thinking, Feeling, respectively. This was the presenting paradigm or in other words, a way of thinking that I (at least) have brought home with me from the Oxford Hindu Centre on the 28th of July 2011. Later, when I was asked to sum up the day’s experience, two words instantly came to mind: thought provoking. Upon reflection I recognise the inspiration behind my selected words: Shaunaka Rishi Das ji, the speaker, informed us that Oxford University teaches its students to think.

Nehru Centre Event: Indian Insights on the World's Oldest Questions

Nehru Centre Event
Monday, 25 July 2011 - 6:30pm to 8:30pm

One of the notable features of modernity is the conflict that emerges between ‘extreme religion’ on the one hand and ‘extreme materialism’ on the other.  A careful study of Indian thought, however, reveals a different approach to life based on the need to strike a balance and to develop a mood of tolerance towards other religious views.  In this talk we will explore these teachings and reflect upon the need to balance material and spiritual progress and find ways of reconciling the quest for material and spiritual goals.

 
Director of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies Department of