Reviews
Professor Hunt’s new book eloquently expounds the age-old wisdom of Buddhism (Dharma) with particular reference to its practical utility of enhancing one’s own personal experience of life, thus essentially serving as a guide to individual enlightenment. As the author declares it is in a real sense an ‘instruction handbook’ to be used for ‘seeing things differently’. However, if this transformation can be realistically achieved at the level of the individual, it can also be achieved collectively at a societal and global scale. Buddhist values can then hopefully be reinstated globally and serve to steer the world in the direction of peace, compassion and universal love. Books such as Professor Hunt’s The Buddha’s Path of Peace may help to bring this process to the fore.Professor Chandra Wickramasinghe, Buckingham University, UK
In the hundred or so generations that have passed since the Buddha walked among us, people have been left with the challenge of preserving and passing on his teachings in a way that is relevant to their own age. While the causes of our anguishes and woes might have changed in that time, the nature of those feelings has not. Each generation has to find their own way through the particular travails and circumstances of their everyday lives to realize the truth and depth of the Buddha’s insights that our unhappiness is a function of our wayward minds and that the road to genuine happiness begins with learning to see into the mind’s workings and free ourselves from the hold it has on us. Geoff Hunt is a teacher for our times. With the clear and logical mind of a scientist, he provides a clear scheme of the Buddha’s teaching made relevant for our frantic and restless modern world. More important still, he does not only give us the intellectual concepts to absorb as knowledge but leads us to an understanding of how these are to be experienced and lived in our lives. His book will be an invaluable guide to those starting out in their exploration of Buddhism and contains much that will help the experienced practitioner.
Dr Michael O’Neill, Member of the Zen Trust (London) and long-time meditation teacher
An excellent addition to current materials available on Buddhist practice, particularly those using the language and structures of the Southern Buddhist tradition.
From the Foreword by Amaro Bhikkhu