Translated by F Max-Muller,
revised and with an Introduction by Suren Navlakha.
Upanishads are mankind's oldest works of philosophy, predating the
earliest Greek philosophy. They are the concluding part of the Vedas,
the ancient Indian sacred literature, and mark the culmination of a
tradition of speculative thought first expressed in the Rig-Veda more
than 4000 years ago. Remarkable for their meditative depth, spirit
of doubt and intellectual honesty, the Upanishads are concerned with
the knowledge of the Brahman, the Ultimate Reality, and Man's relationship
with it. The name Upanishad is derived from the face-to-face mode of
imparting knowledge - in the utmost sanctity and secrecy, to prevent
its trivialisation or perversion. Composed in Sanskrit between 900
and 600 BC, the Upanishads presented here are by far the oldest and
most important of those that exist. Twelve were first translated more
than a hundred years ago, and have been extensively revised and edited.
The thirteenth is an entirely new translation by Suren Navlakha.