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El. knyga: Science and Philosophy in the Indian Buddhist Classics, Vol. 2: The Mind

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The second volume in a prominent new series on Buddhism and science, directed by the Dalai Lama and previously covered by the BBC.

Science and Philosophy in the Indian Buddhist Classics compiles classical Buddhist explorations of the nature of our material world, the human mind, logic, and phenomenology and puts them into context for the modern reader. 

This ambitious four-volume series&;a major resource for the history of ideas and especially the history of science and philosophy&;has been conceived by and compiled under the visionary supervision of His Holiness the Dalai Lama himself. It is his view that the exploratory thinking of great Indian masters in the first millennium CE still has much that is of interest to us today, whether we are Buddhist or not. These volumes make those insights accessible.

This, the second volume in the series, focuses on the science of the mind. Readers are first introduced to Buddhist conceptions of mind and consciousness and then led through traditional presentations of mental phenomena to reveal a Buddhist vision of the inner world with fascinating implications for the contemporary disciplines of cognitive science, psychology, emotion research, and philosophy of mind. Major topics include:

-The distinction between sensory and conceptual processes and the pan-Indian notion of mental consciousness

-Mental factors&;specific mental states such as attention, mindfulness, and compassion&;and how they relate to one another

-The unique tantric theory of subtle levels of consciousness, their connection to the subtle energies, or &;winds,&; that flow through channels in the human body, and what happens to each when the body and mind dissolve at the time of death

-The seven types of mental states and how they impact the process of perception

-Styles of reasoning, which Buddhists understand as a valid avenue for acquiring sound knowledge

In the final section, the volume offers what might be called Buddhist contemplative science, a presentation of the classical Buddhist understanding of the psychology behind meditation and other forms of mental training.

To present these specific ideas and their rationale, the volume weaves together passages from the works of great Buddhist thinkers like Asanga, Vasubandhu, Nagarjuna, Dignaga, and Dharmakirti. His Holiness the Dalai Lama&;s introduction outlines scientific and philosophical thinking in the history of the Buddhist tradition. To provide additional context for Western readers, each of the six major topics is introduced with an essay by John D. Dunne, distinguished professor of Buddhist philosophy and contemplative practice at the University of Wisconsin. These essays connect the traditional material to contemporary debates and Western parallels, and provide helpful suggestions for further reading.
Preface vii
Introduction by His Holiness the Dalai Lama 1(22)
PART 1 MIND
23(60)
1 The Nature of Mind
39(10)
2 Sense Consciousness
49(16)
3 Conceptual and Nonconceptual
65(10)
4 Valid and Mistaken
75(8)
PART 2 MENTAL FACTORS
83(116)
5 Distinguishing Mind and Mental Factors
97(10)
6 Omnipresent Mental Factors
107(4)
7 Mental Factors with a Determinate Object
111(8)
8 Virtuous Mental Factors
119(6)
9 Love and Compassion
125(14)
10 Mental Afflictions
139(18)
11 Variable Mental Factors
157(4)
11 Mental Factors in Other Works
161(14)
13 Substantial and Imputed Mental Factors
175(6)
14 Alternate Presentations of Mental Factors
181(18)
PART 3 CROSS AND SUBTLE MINDS
199(34)
15 Gross and Subtle Minds in the Shared Traditions
207(6)
16 Gross and Subtle Minds in Highest Yoga Tantra
213(20)
PART 4 MIND AND ITS OBJECTS
233(46)
17 How the Mind Engages Its Objects
247(16)
18 The Sevenfold Typology of Cognition
263(16)
PART 5 INFERENTIAL REASONING
279(72)
19 Reasoning and Rationality
293(26)
20 Categories of Correct Evidence
319(18)
21 Fallacious Inferential Evidence
337(6)
22 Dignaga's Drum of a Wheel of Reasons
343(8)
PART 6 TRAINING THE MIND THROUGH MEDITATION
351(116)
23 How the Mind Is Trained
367(26)
24 Calm Abiding
393(30)
25 Analysis and Insight
423(8)
26 Mindfulness Meditation
431(14)
27 The Eight Worldly Concerns
445(10)
28 Increasing Good Qualities
455(6)
29 Concluding Topic: The Person or Self
461(6)
Notes 467(26)
Glossary 493(14)
Bibliography 507(10)
Index 517(36)
About the Authors 553