This essay examines the formative history of the cakras of tantric yoga through a genealogy of the “wheel of the navel” (nābhicakra) and “lotus of the heart” (hṛdayapuṇḍarīka, etc.). Both expressions appear in the Pātañjalayogaśāstra and have precursors in early religious and medical literatures. It is shown that Patañjali’s wheel metaphor likely derives from a classical Āyurvedic conception of the navel as a wheel-like hub of bodily ducts, while the image of the heart as a lotus can be traced back to early Upaniṣads (Chāndogya 8, 1.1). Further examination reveals that multiple wheel and lotus metaphors feature in early religious and medical representations of the body, which are closely connected. This study highlights important continuities between medical views of the body, Pātañjala yoga, and the body of the early Śaiva tantra corpus.
The Wheel of the Navel and Lotus of the Heart: Metaphor, Medical Knowledge, and the Body of Early Yoga
File Type:
external link
Categories:
Philology, Tantra
Date of Publication:
2025
Citation:
Hatley, S. (2025). The Wheel of the Navel and Lotus of the Heart: Metaphor, Medical Knowledge, and the Body of Early Yoga. Journal of Yoga Studies, 6, 221–257. Retrieved from https://journalofyogastudies.org/index.php/JoYS/article/view/141
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