Meaning of Life: Perspectives from the World’s Great Intellectual Traditions
Guided by a passionate professor, this course offers a rigorous exploration of what spiritual, religious, and philosophical traditions from East and West contribute to life’s biggest question.
Overview
Course No. 4320
This 36-lecture journey examines life’s meaning through:
- Sacred texts like the Bhagavad-Gita, Daodejing, and Buddhist teachings
- Philosophical giants including Aristotle, Kant, Nietzsche, and Hume
- Modern thinkers like Gandhi and the Dalai Lama
- Indigenous wisdom from Lakota Sioux traditions
What You’ll Discover:
✓ How different cultures approach life’s purpose
✓ Practical wisdom from ancient and modern traditions
✓ Common themes across diverse philosophies
✓ Ways to apply these insights to your own life
Video Lectures
Section 1: Eastern Traditions
01-04: Bhagavad-Gita (30-33 min)
Choice, duty, and cosmic purpose in Hindu philosophy
12-16: Chinese Philosophy (29-32 min)
Confucian order, Daoist spontaneity, and Zhuangzi’s paradoxes
17-21: Buddhist Paths (31-32 min)
Four Noble Truths, Mahayana compassion, and Zen awakening
Section 2: Western Classics
05-07: Aristotle (30-32 min)
Eudaimonia, virtue ethics, and the flourishing life
10-11: Stoicism & Epicureanism (29-31 min)
Rational acceptance and human finitude
23-29: Modern Thinkers (30-32 min)
Hume’s skepticism, Kant’s enlightenment, Nietzsche’s authenticity
Section 3: Contemporary Voices
30-31: Gandhi (31 min)
Satyagraha and the supernormal life
32-33: Lame Deer (28-33 min)
Lakota Sioux symbolism and critique of modernity
34-35: Dalai Lama (32 min)
Buddhist-inflected happiness in modern life
Conclusion
36: Synthesis (34 min)
Recurring themes and personal applications

