
Bhagavadgita - des Erhabenen Sang
On a battlefield at the dawn of war, a prince named Arjuna falters. His charioteer is Krishna, and what unfolds between them over eighteen chapters is nothing less than a radical reimagining of what it means to live, to act, and to be free. The Bhagavadgita, the Song of the Sublime One, presents a vision of existence where duty and devotion are not opposed, where action itself becomes a path to transcendence, and where the self is revealed as eternal. Composed roughly two thousand years ago and woven into the great epic Mahabharata, this text synthesizes the philosophical riches of ancient India into something startlingly direct: a manual for living with clarity in a world of suffering and choice. Krishna teaches that liberation lies not in withdrawing from life but in engaging with it fully, without attachment to results. Whether read as sacred scripture or philosophical inquiry, this book offers a challenge that has resonated for millennia: to discover who you are when the arrows fly.


