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Topics Worth Investigating ...................................................... 107

11. Om .............................................................................................. 109

Ideas of Interest from “Om” .................................................... 109

The Reading Selection from “Om” .......................................... 110

Topics Worth Investigating ...................................................... 115

12. Govinda ...................................................................................... 117

Ideas of Interest from “Govinda” ............................................. 117

The Reading Selection from “Govinda” .................................. 118

Topics Worth Investigating ...................................................... 126

Index ......................................................................................................... 129

Colophon .................................................................................................. 132

Siddhartha: An Open-Source Text

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Tabulae Rudolphinae : quibus astronomicae. . . by Johannes Kepler, 1571-1630, NOAA

Why Open Source?

Many works in philosophy and literature are accessible via online sources on the Internet. Fortunately, much of the best work in philosophy and literature is available in the public domain. A translation of Herman Hesse’s Siddhartha, in particular, became available through Project Gutenberg by Michael Pullen.

This edited version of that text is subject to the legal notice following the title page referencing the “GFDL License.”

Since the edited text is placed under the GFDL, this work is open-sourced, in part, to minimize costs to interested students of philosophy and, in part, to make it widely available in a form convenient to a wide variety of readers.

A particular virtue of the DocBook method of publishing used here is the practicable conversion of the source files into a variety of formats, including audio and Braille. Moreover, readers, themselves, can improve the product if they wish to do so.

This particular edition represents the first stable version in the development of the open-source text. The development model of Siddhartha is loosely patterned on the “release early, release often” model championed by Eric S.

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Raymond.1 Various formats of this work are being made available for distribution. If the core reading and commentary prove useful, the successive revisions will be released as incrementally numbered “stable” versions beyond version 1.0. Our publication is based on Open Source DocBook, a system of writing structured documents using SGML or XML in a presentation-neutral form using open source programs. The functionality of DocBook is such that the same file can be published on the Web, printed as a standalone report, reprinted as part of a journal, processed into an audio file, changed into Braille, or converted to most other media types. If the core readings and commentary prove useful, successive revisions, readings, commentaries, and other improvements by users can be released in incrementally numbered

“stable” versions.

Several sources on the Internet deserve special mention for authoritative and insightful analysis and commentary on philosophy. Readers who wish to be conversant fully with the philosophical ideas will wish to consult the following e-texts.

1. Dictionary of the History of Ideas.2 Studies of Selected Pivotal Ideas, edited by Philip P. Wiener, was published by Charles Scribner’s Sons, New York, in 1973-74. Now out of print, the Dictionary is published online with the help of Scribner’s and the Electric Text Center at the University of Virginia. The Dictionary includes articles on the historical development of a broad spectrum of ideas in philosophy, religion, politics, literature, and the biological, physical, and social sciences.

2. The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.3 This site (subtitled "A Field Guide to the Nomenclature of Philosophy") consists of regularly updated original articles by fifteen editors, one hundred academic specialists, and technical advisors. The articles are authoritative, peer-reviewed, and available for personal and classroom use. The general editors are James Fieser and Bradley Dowden. The site is most useful for students in obtaining secondary source information on the key terms and personages of philosophy. The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy can also be rec-ommended for obtaining an overview of the problems of philosophy for background readings for lectures and papers. In general, the articles are well researched and are accessible by undergraduates.

3. The Johns Hopkins Guide to Literary Theory & Criticism.4 The elec-tronic version of the well-known guide to literary theory has hyper-linked cross-references, names, topics, and subject entries as well as full 1.

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