The anthology "Transforming the Subjective and the Objective: Transpositional Subjectobjectivity," edited by Ananta Kumar Giri, contains essays by scholars from around the world. The contributors explore the concept of transpositional subject-objectivity, which Giri has been exploring for several decades. The theme is examined by the contributors from various philosophical and interdisciplinary perspectives. In our time, the future of mankind as a whole is linked to the existential need to reintegrate humanity and human mental and technological processes into the cosmically integrated life of the whole. The concept of integrating all differences in a holistic, multi-topical process, without neglecting plurality, provides the basis for a comprehensive understanding of theory and action in the 21st century. The book presents innovative perspectives from many different angles, reflecting the polycontextural landscape of the meta-concept. "Transforming the Subjective and the Objective: Transpositional Subjectobjectivity" is highly recommended.- David Bartosch, Beijing Normal University, Zhuhai, ChinaFor decades Ananta Kumar Giri has established himself as a powerful leading voice for intercultural dialogue. His abilities to bring together the most innovative and transformative scholars in order to cross national, disciplinary, cultural, and political boundaries are unparalleled. His most recent outstanding volume of Subjectobjectivity fits into this trajectory by advancing the discussion via transgressing the boundaries of the subject/object distinction or epistemology and ontology. Leading and emerging scholars from a wide variety of cultures, disciplines, and perspectives unite to produce an immensely rich and innovate volume: a must-read for anyone aiming to emphasise that objectivity requires subjectivity, that ontology is inevitably disclosed from subject-positions, and that ‘truth’, ‘knowledge’, and ‘reality’ will only survive as valid concepts if based on recognizing our inevitable ‘subjectobjectivity.’- Hans-Herbert Koegler, University of North Florida, Jacksonville, USAAnanta Kumar Giri always assembles an interesting ensemble of authors to write on interesting themes, in the present volume on the relationship of an old couple: subject and object, self and other. Richard Hartz, philologist and archivist, creates a cross-cultural dialogue between Sri Aurobindo and Mou Zongsan – original thinkers, he calls them, a rare breed – who wrote in twentieth-century India and China and “reinterpreted Western ideas within Eastern conceptual frameworks”, as he puts it. Muhammad Maroof Shah, a Kashmiri embodiment of the not-two-ness which this volume explores, working on the delicate borderline of philosophy and mysticism, religiousness and secularism, writes here on mystic unicity from Abhinavagupta through Meister Eckhart and Ibn Arabi to Evelyn Underhill. A volume which includes these authors, and others, is worth reading!- Daniel Raveh, Tel Aviv University, IsraelProfessor Ananta Kumar Giri has assembled a group of stellar scholars to tackle one of the hardest problems in philosophy, namely the relationship between the subject and the object. The chapters deal with various ways this seemingly untractable problem can be solved. The world needs to transcend this duality, and this book is a useful guide.- Soraj Hongladarom, Professor Emeritus, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand