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  • Published: 25 September 1992
  • ISBN: 9780679732334
  • Imprint: Knopf US
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 224
  • RRP: $36.00

Nature, Man and Woman




A poetic examination of nature, humanity and spirituality by pioneering Zen scholar Alan Watts

From “perhaps the foremost interpreter of Eastern disciplines for the contemporary West—and an author who ‘had the rare gift of ‘writing beautifully the unwritable’” (Los Angeles Times)—a guide that draws on Chinese Taoism to reexamine humanity’s place in the natural world and the relation between body and spirit.

Western thought and culture have coalesced around a series of constructed ideas—that human beings stand separate from a nature that must be controlled; that the mind is somehow superior to the body; that all sexuality entails a seduction—that in some way underlie our exploitation of the earth, our distrust of emotion, and our loneliness and reluctance to love. Here, Watts fundamentally challenges these assumptions, drawing on the precepts of Taoism to present an alternative vision of man and the universe—one in which the distinctions between self and other, spirit and matter give way to a more holistic way of seeing.

  • Published: 25 September 1992
  • ISBN: 9780679732334
  • Imprint: Knopf US
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 224
  • RRP: $36.00

About the author

Alan W. Watts

Alan Watts was the foremost Western expert on Eastern thought, specialising in Zen Buddhism. He was the author of a number of books on the philosophy and psychology of religion, which have continued to be in popular demand over the past forty years.

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