Difference between revisions of "Reynolds, F."
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+ | |bio=Frank E. Reynolds is co-author of Two Wheels of Dhamma and co-editor of The Biographical Process: Essays in the History and Psychology of Religion. He teaches Buddhist Studies at Chicago and has been Evans-Wentz Lecturer at Stanford.Earle H. Waugh, who teaches Religious Studies at Alberta, holds degrees from McMaster and Chicago. He wrote "Muhammad as Model in the Sufi Tradition" for The Biographical Process, and is project director for a film series on religious diversity. | ||
|IsInGyatsa=No | |IsInGyatsa=No | ||
|classification=People | |classification=People |
Revision as of 16:15, 16 September 2020
English Phonetics | Frank E. Reynolds |
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Tibetan calendar dates
Biographical Information
Frank E. Reynolds is co-author of Two Wheels of Dhamma and co-editor of The Biographical Process: Essays in the History and Psychology of Religion. He teaches Buddhist Studies at Chicago and has been Evans-Wentz Lecturer at Stanford.Earle H. Waugh, who teaches Religious Studies at Alberta, holds degrees from McMaster and Chicago. He wrote "Muhammad as Model in the Sufi Tradition" for The Biographical Process, and is project director for a film series on religious diversity.
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Full Name[edit]
Frank E. Reynolds
Affiliation[edit]
Other Information[edit]
Frank E. Reynolds is co-author of Two Wheels of Dhamma and co-editor of The Biographical Process: Essays in the History and Psychology of Religion. He teaches Buddhist Studies at Chicago and has been Evans-Wentz Lecturer at Stanford.Earle H. Waugh, who teaches Religious Studies at Alberta, holds degrees from McMaster and Chicago. He wrote "Muhammad as Model in the Sufi Tradition" for The Biographical Process, and is project director for a film series on religious diversity.