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Paperback Meister Eckhart: The Essential Writings Book

ISBN: 006130008X

ISBN13: 9780061300080

Meister Eckhart: The Essential Writings

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

In a modern translation by Raymond B. Blakney, here are the essential writings of Meister Eckhart, the celebrated 14th Century German-born Dominican philosopher, mystic, and spiritual master, including his famous, brilliantly reasoned defense against charges of heresy during a local Franciscan-led Inquisition. Perhaps the most daring and profound Christian philosophy in the history of Western mysticism, the writings and teachings of Meister Eckhart...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

The Best Book

This is honestly the best book I have ever read. I will go back to it again and again because there is so much depth to it.

A classic

"The Eye with which I see God is the eye with which God sees me" - Meister Eckhart. Almost everyone drawn to Eckhart agrees that he makes engaging reading. The writings of this 14th c German mystic are veritable 'essen' - spiritual food. As Blakney says. . ."Eckhart breathed his own endless vitality into the juiceless formulas of orthodox theology with such charm and passion that even the most common people heard them gladly. " Eckhart's pregnant sayings function rather like Christian koans, de-centering and then re-centering the mind, elevating thought to the unthinkable. As Blakney observed, we often think of Eckhart's age as one of juiceless aridities - viz. Nietzsche's and Heidegger's strictures against Christianity as - 'Platonism for the masses' - pallid abstractions. A serious reading of Eckhart shows us the other side of the coin, for Eckhart breathes spiritual vitality. In this, he wasn't alone. 14th c Europe witnessed a great flowering of mysticism. . .Julian of Norwich, The 'Cloud of Unknowing,'Catherine of Sienna - to name but a few. Eckhart epitomised this movement and remains one of its most outstanding voices. If you haven't yet read Eckhart, you can be sure that savouring his words will change your perception of Christianity. D.T. Suzuki - who more or less paved the way for Zen in the West, had a soft spot for Eckhart ('inked' references to Eckhart even found their way into the edition of the 'Rinzai Roku' issued by Suzuki at Matsugaoka Zen Bunka). One reviewer has criticised Blakney's translation (1941), on the grounds that it was based on dated and poorly edited material (Pfeiffer, 1857). While I would certainly recommend reading recent translations based on the Kohlhammer text (1955, ed. Josef Quint), Blakney's translation has merits of its own. The translation is lively. It has a useful preface, with a glossary explaining some of the key terms used by Eckhart. This is followed by an absorbing Introduction, giving the general reader a good idea of Eckhart's background. Rest assured, the core material Blakney has presented gives you the 'quintessential' Eckhart. The disputed parts of the Pfeiffer text play a negligible role here and are unlikely to trouble the general reader. There are now a number of handy-sized, single volume 'introductions' to Eckhart - in English, but they tend to be rather dry. Blakney's was an inspired translation, and still represents the best account of Eckhart in an affordable, single volume - with enough supplementary material to give the general reader a useful grounding in Eckhart's background. You get a good spread of material: (1) The Talks of Instruction.(2) The Book of Divine Comfort. (3) The Aristocrat.(4) About Disinterest. (5) Sermons. (6) Fragments. (7) Legends.(8) The Defence. The text has extensive notes, which are placed unobtrusively at the back of the book. There is a useful bibliography. What Eckhart says about 'disinterest'

Best of the Mystic Tradition

Agree with previous reviewer's views. It is a deep read. A classic in the western Christian mystic tradition comparable to Shankara's commentaries in the Eastern tradition. Worth its price for Sermons 20 and 28 alone! I have gone back to this book several times over the years. And am currently reading it again, preceeding my morning meditations. After 45 years of meditation this book still pushes the meditation deeper. One must read this a page or two a day. It isn't really possible to absorb much more than that at a sitting. The selection of Eckhart's writings and the clarity of the translation have made this one of the most treasured books in my library.

Timeless

This book is a well-chosen and remarkably comprehensive collection of Eckhart, in an absolutely enchanting translation. For someone who would like a readable and usable volume of Eckhart, this is a super choice. For someone who is a devotee of Eckhart, this volume simply can't be missed and should go on the shelf with other works of/on Eckhart. It contains the Talks of Instruction, the Book of Divine Comfort, the Aristocrat, a somewhat less well-known piece called "About Disinterest", and 28 sermons, plus an introduction to Eckhart. Also in the book are some legends concerning Eckhart that are deeply moving, and there is a copy of Eckhart's defense (which I have not seen elsewhere). As I said, the translation is marvellous and very readable. My only caveats are as follows. First, for someone entirely unfamiliar with Eckhart and needing something easier to "approach", probably the best book is "Meister Eckhart from whom God hid nothing" (compiled by Steindl-Rast), since it starts with short quotes and builds to longer excerpts from Eckhart's best works. But in the end Steindl-Rast's work leaves one wanting more of Eckhart and that's where this book satisfies (and continues to excel in its beautiful prose). And second, this edition is unfortunately done with "cheap" paper and eventually with passing years it will be yellowed, cracking, and possibly falling apart. It's a shame because it deserves good acid-free paper and a better binding. Maybe Harper and Row will come through someday, but even so this book is a gem. Enjoy!
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