Yoga:
The Indian Tradition
Yoga: The Indian Tradition - by Ian (EDT) Whicher, David (EDT) Carpenter - Health & Fitness - 2003 - 256 pages As a tradition yoga has been far from monolithic. It has embraced a variety of practices and orientations, borrowing from and influencing a vast array of ...
The Indian Tradition of yoga, first codified in the Yoga
Sutra of Patanjali in the third or fourth century CE, constitutes
one of the world's earliest and most influential traditions
of spiritual practice.

It is a tradition that, by the time of Patanjali, already
had an extensive (if obscure) pre-history and one that was
to have, after Patanjali, an extraordinarily rich and diverse
future. As a tradition, yoga has been far from monolithic.
It has embraced a variety of practices and orientations, borrowing
from and influencing a vast array of Indic religious traditions
down through the centuries.
Recent years have witnessed an increased production in scholarly
works on the yoga tradition, which has helped to chart this
complex and multifaceted evolution and to demonstrate the
important role that it has played in the development of India's
religious and philosophical traditions. And yet the popular
perception of yoga in the West remains for the most part that
of a physical fitness program, largely divorced from its historical
and spiritual roots.
The essays collected here provide a sense of the historical
emergence of the classical system presented by Patanjali,
a careful examination of the key elements, overall character
and contemporary relevance of that system (as found in the
Yoga Sutra) and a glimpse of some
of the tradition's many important ramifications in later Indian
religious history.
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