The Principal Upanishads (book)

The Principal Upanishads  

Cover of the 1994 edition
Author(s) Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
Language English
Subject(s) Upanishads
Genre(s) Philosophy; Spirituality
Publisher Allen & Unwin; Harper Collins India; others
Publication date 1953; 1994; others
Pages 958
ISBN 81-7223-124-5

The Principal Upanishads is a 1953 book written by philosopher and erstwhile President of India, Dr. Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan (1888–1975), about the main Upanishads, which carry central teachings of the Vedanta. Originally published in 1953 by Harper, the book has been republished several times. The book has been reviewed in both magazines[1] and professional journals.[2][3][4][5] All editions have had 958 pages and have used the same title, although the spelling of "Upanishads" has varied slightly between editions and their listing elsewhere (the retroflex "sh" has also been represented as "ṣ" or as "ṣh").

Contents

Outline of book

Radhakrishnan's The Principal Upanishads begins with a 129 page introduction, with the following 19 section headers:

General Influence; The Term 'Upaniṣad'; Number, Date and Authorship; The Upaniṣads as the Vedanta; Relation to the Vedas: The Rg Veda; The Yajur, the Sama and the Atharva Vedas; The Brahmanas; The Aranyakas; The Upaniṣads;

Ultimate Reality: Brahman; Ultimate Reality: Atman; Brahman as Atman; The Status of the World and the Doctrine of Maya and Avidya; The Individual Self; Knowledge and Ignorance; Ethics; Karma and Rebirth; Life Eternal; Religion.

The largest portion of the book (pp. 147–938) contains Sanskrit originals (in a romanized transliteration, rather than in Devanagiri), plus verse-by-verse translations and commentaries on the following Upanishads, in this order:

Translated Upanishads

1. Bṛhadāraṇyaka   
2. Chāndogya
3. Aitareya
4. Taittirīya
5. Īṣa
6. Kena

7. Kaṭha
8. Praśna
9. Muṇḍaka
10. Māṇḍūkya
11. Śvetāśvatara   
12. Kauśītāki

13. Maitrāyaṇi
14. Subāla
15. Jābāla
16. Paiṅgala
17. Kaivalya
18. Vajrasūcikā   

The book also includes two appendices about the perspectives of Rabindranath Tagore and Edmond Holmes on the Upanishads, as well as a selected bibliography (2 pages) and general index (6 pages); all editions also contain a preface by the author (6 pages), dated 1951.

Reviews

The book was reviewed in the magazine Newsweek in 1954, soon after it was first published.[1] The reviewer stated that

"The Principal Upanishads"... have now been nicely translated by Sir Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, Asia's foremost contemporary philosopher, a man as well-versed in Jewish and Christian theology as he is in the cults and culture of the East.... His book includes... a strikingly clear commentary explaining their spirit as well as their literal meaning. (p. 55[1])

The book was also reviewed in several professional journals, including Journal of Bible and Religion (predecessor to the Journal of the American Academy of Religion),[2] Philosophy,[3] The Journal of Religion,[4] and The Philosophical Review.[5]

Journal of Bible and Religion referred to the book as "Another solid work by India's greatest living philosopher.... Radhakrishnan has selected the eighteen most important [Upanishads]" (p. 152[2]). Philosophy stated that "The Western world was in fact already well provided with translations and critical editions," but that "the value of Radhakrishnan's version... will surely be found to lie in his commentary and the long introductory essay on the teaching of the Upanisads, for therein the Western scholar is given the interpretation of these basic documents of Hinduism reached by one of the finest minds of contemporary India after long years of study both of his people's traditional philosophy and of the thought of the West" (pp. 71–72 [3]).

One reviewer of a subsequent translation of the Upanishads by Swami Nikhilananda provided extensive comparison between the two versions.[6]

Editions

The original edition was published by in 1953 in London by Allen & Unwin and in New York by Harper. Editions include:

The book has also been translated into other languages besides English (e.g., Hindi, Delhi: Rajapala, 1981, OCLC 19410015).

As a work of scholarly interest, the Introduction itself has been translated and republished (e.g., Hindi, Delhi: Rajapala, 1990 "Upanishadoṃ kī sandeśa", ISBN 8170280877, ISBN 9788170280873, OCLC 30701903)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Anonymous (1954, July 26). "...And free from fetters [review of Radhakrishnan's principal Upanishads]". Newsweek 44 (4): 55. 
  2. ^ a b c Archie J. Bahm (1955, April). "[Untitled review of Radhakrishnan's principal Upanishads]". Journal of Bible and Religion (Oxford University Press) 23 (2): 152. JSTOR 1457242. 
  3. ^ a b c S. G. F. Brandon (1955, January). "[Untitled review of Radhakrishnan's principal Upanishads]". Philosophy (Cambridge University Press on behalf of Royal Institute of Philosophy) 30 (112): 71–73. JSTOR 3747735. 
  4. ^ a b Joseph M. Kitagawa (1955, April). "[Untitled review of Radhakrishnan's principal Upanishads]". The Journal of Religion (University of Chicago Press) 35 (2): 131. doi:10.1086/484682. JSTOR 1200630. 
  5. ^ a b E. A. Burtt (1957, April). "[Untitled review of Radhakrishnan's principal Upanishads]". Journal of Bible and Religion (Duke University Press on behalf of Philosophical Review) 66 (2): 275–277. JSTOR 2182385. 
  6. ^ Hajime Nakamura (1962, January). "[Untitled review of Nikhilananda's The Upanishads]". Philosophy East and West (University of Hawai'i Press) 11 (4): 245–253. JSTOR 1397027.