Ramchandra Gandhi — a sage of our times — was a modern teacher, but adapted the methods of the Upanishadic gurus. For me, as a writer he was one of the greatest Indians in that period — passionate, open, searching for the validation of ‘advaitic’ experience in the quotidian lived realities as well as in the imagined transcendent sphere. He was loved and admired by a small circle when he was alive, and this book is a daring attempt to bring him to the attention of a wider reading public. — U. R. Ananthamurthy, Eminent Kannada Writer and Critic; Chancellor, Central University of KarnatakaRamu Gandhi was a scholar, a thinker, a loner, and a free spirit. He was a great teacher, a good friend, and had a tremendous sense of humour. Often mischievous in his intellectual forays, he was passionately committed to the values of humanism. These essays are a fine tribute to an engaging, interesting and provocative philosopher.— Sanjaya Baru, Former Media Advisor to the Prime Minister; Director, Geo-economics and Strategy, The International Institute for Strategic Studies