cover image: The Sino-Indian Journal. July 1947

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The Sino-Indian Journal. July 1947

1947

The object of the Sino-Indian Cultpral Society is to study the mind of India and of China to link up the !earnings of the two countries with a view to an interchange of their culturii and cultivation of friendship -between the two nationand ultimately to work together for world peace and social harmony. [...] As the representatives of two of the oldest and most philosophical civilizations of the world it falls to India and to China to give the right lead to others. [...] In China the Unnameable clne the Great Mystery is known as Tao ; and since in the spiritual life the Goal is also 318 THE SING-INDIAN JOURNAL the way Tao is the way to be followed by the spiritual aspirant. [...] "For a man of affairs not to master the ancient methods ( the doctrine of Tao taught by Yaou and Shun ) and yet to be capable of perpetuating his generations is a thing of which Yueh never yet heard." Yet he reminded the King that 'sit is not the knowledge of a thing but the doing of it that is difficult." But for a fuller description of what is meant by Tao and the way of life it implies we now [...] The first sentence of the opening chapter takes us at once into the presence of the Great Mystery and we are reminded of the impossibility of trying to grasp the Infinite to know it or define it.
humanities general

Authors

Prabhat Kumar Mukherjee

Pages
178
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120242
Segment Pages Author Actions
Cover
i-iii unknown view
Frontmatter
i-vii unknown view
India and China
1-4 Jawaharla Nehru view
Meeting of Brothers
5-14 Ksiutimohan Sen view
A Spiritual Alliance
15-24 Irene Ray view
My Friend—The Chinese
25-26 Gurudial Mallik view
Impressions of an Indian Christian in China
27-29 C.E. Abraham view
Chinese Ideals of Character Education
30-36 Chen Li-Fu view
China’s Culture and Civilization
37-52 Tan Yun-Shan view
Chinese and Indian Art: Some Parallelisms
53-57 O. C. Gangoly view
Buddhist Literature in Mongolia
58-76 Probhat Mukherji view
The Sino-Indian Relations of Old
77-94 Sujitkumar Mukhopadhyaya view
The Divine Man
95-101 Nalini Gupta view
Centres of Activity for Sino-Indian Studies
102-105 P. V. Bapat view
A General Course for Chinese Studies in Indian Universities
106-108 Tan Tun-Shan view
The Death Traffic
109-116 Rabindranath Tagore view
The “Kalpa” Chronology in Ancient China
117-146 A. Balakrishna Pillai view
Notes and Reports
147-163 unknown view
Rise and Fall of Civilizations
164-164 unknown view

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