The Best Books on Eastern Philosophy — What the Traditions Actually Teach

Eastern philosophy has been available to Western readers for over a century and is still widely misunderstood. The popular versions strip out the rigor and leave the aesthetics. Here is the reading list that takes the actual philosophical content seriously.

The Essential Reading

The traditions at their best — not their most palatable

The Tao Te Ching — Lao Tzu (Stephen Mitchell translation): The most precise philosophical statement of Taoist cosmology. Mitchell captures the philosophical precision without the archaism.
In the Buddhas Words — Bhikkhu Bodhi: The most comprehensive and accurate collection of the Buddha actual teachings in the Pali Canon.
The Upanishads — Eknath Easwaran translation: The most readable scholarly translation. The Brahman-Atman relationship at its most philosophically precise.
Zen Mind Beginners Mind — Shunryu Suzuki: The most accessible account of Zen practice philosophy. The beginner mind as both method and goal.
The Bhagavad Gita — Barbara Stoler Miller translation: The dialogue between Arjuna and Krishna — the most concentrated philosophical statement of Hindu cosmology and practice.

Where the Panentheistic Correction Applies

Non-duality — and genuine creaturely distinction

The deepest convergence across these traditions is the account of the ordinary self as constructed — as a configuration of habits and identifications that is real but not ultimate. Taoism calls this obscuration. Buddhism calls it ego-clinging. Vedanta calls it avidya. The framework agrees: habitual subconscious patterns constitute the primary obstruction to structural correspondence with the Logos.

Where the traditions most need the framework correction is in accounts of liberation that dissolve the individual into the universal. The framework holds both simultaneously: the creature is inseparable from and derives entirely from the ground — AND the creature is genuinely other than the ground. The creature is not the ground. Essence infinitely exceeds what is brought forth from it. Both true at once. Neither dissolved into the other.

Read the book

Infinitely Simple: The Foundation — nine chapters, first principles, no assumptions. The guided practice applies it to the brain and body. Free on YouTube.