Non-Jonesian Indology and Alexander
Posted: Mon Oct 11, 2004 3:20 am
Dear Jona,My book GÇ£Non-Jonesian Indology and AlexanderGÇ¥ was published in 2002 November and I had written in this forum about the utter repugnance of Indian historians towards it. One very respected art historian, Pratapaditya Pal of Chicago even accused me of giving away our national wealth! As a writer I am not above making mistakes and had expected brickbats but the fact that no one wanted to even review my book hurt me very much.Fortunately this painful phase is now over and I thank Prof. Jan-Mathieu Carbon of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, for it http://www.classics.und.ac.za/reviews/05-19pal.htm. As a writer one has to learn to live with reviewers who apparently operate from a loftier plane but 'Name that Hallucinate' is actually a misquotation. I had written GÇ£Names that HallucinateGÇ¥ and despite my limited familiarity with the English Language, as a section heading GÇ£The Names that HallucinateGÇ¥ appears preposterous. 'Nandas were from Baluchistan Area' is, of course, a mistake for which I have to apologize. I have been reprimanded for my association with GÇÿmasters of befuddlementGÇÖ like Robert Graves and Karl Jung but I still think a historian cannot insulate himself totally from myth. I feel honoured by the epithet GÇÿGravesianGÇÖ and I have tried to learn from one of my great heroes - Wolfgang Pauli (winner of a Nobel Prize for physics) who wrote a book with Karl Jung. GÇ£Heaven has become empty space for us, a fair memory of things that were. But our heart glows, and secret unrest gnaws at the root of our beingGÇ¥, wrote Jung.
Regards,
Dr. Pal
Regards,
Dr. Pal