"I like the accessible way this book is written. It focuses on a most important aspect of Eastern thought and demonstrates its relevance to our current community and individual life in the modern West. At the same time it traces the history of nonviolence in the East in a way that has not been done before." — Harold G. Coward, University of Victoria"Usually the Jains are marginalized and seen as having only a minor role to play in the major religious movements of Buddhism and Hinduism. Chapple shifts the focus and gives evidence that the Jains set the pace for the "renouncer" practices of Buddhism and the Yoga School. By placing the Jains prior to the other "renouncer" groups, one has a new vision of the way in which ahimsa˜ or nonviolence developed in India." — Lewis Lancaster, University of California, Berkeley"The work as a whole goes beyond the normal confines within which nonviolence has hitherto been studied. A good example would be how the author ingeniously brings together conflicting views of world religions by the Jaina methodology of sya˜d-va˜da, rendered by him aptly as 'flexible fundamentalism.'" — Padmanabh S. Jaini, University of California, Berkeley