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The Many Gods: Attention, Form, and Non-Duality in Hindu Thought

The Many Gods: Attention, Form, and Non-Duality in Hindu Thought

Lucas Varro

English, 96 pages

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The Many Gods: Attention, Form, and Non-Duality in Hindu Thought is a contemplative philosophical inquiry into Hindu divine forms, sacred attention, and the strange discipline by which multiplicity may lead toward unity.

Many traditions that speak of non-duality do so by turning away from form. Hindu thought does something more difficult and more subtle: it multiplies form. Its gods, images, names, mantras, yantras, temples, and ritual structures do not merely decorate an idea of unity. They make unity approachable to human perception.

Lucas Varro approaches the gods not as simple symbols, metaphors, archetypes, or objects of belief, but as operations of attention. Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva, Shakti, temple image, sacred sound, and sacred geometry become ways of asking how the mind learns to remain with what it cannot grasp directly.

This is not a general introduction to Hinduism, nor an argument for belief. It is a serious act of philosophical and contemplative attention: an inquiry into how form can become a means of insight rather than an obstacle to it.

For readers of Hindu philosophy, non-duality, religious symbolism, contemplative practice, and the philosophy of sacred form, The Many Gods offers a lucid and reverent account of the many as one — without erasing the many.