Buddhism and Science: Breaking New GroundB. Alan Wallace Columbia University Press, 17 mars 2003 - 432 pages Buddhism and Science brings together distinguished philosophers, Buddhist scholars, physicists, and cognitive scientists to examine the contrasts and connections between the worlds of Western science and Eastern spirituality. This compilation was inspired by a suggestion made by His Holiness the Dalai Lama, himself one of the contributors, after one of a series of cross-cultural scientific dialogues in Dharamsala, India, sponsored by the Mind and Life Institute. Other contributors such as William L. Ames, Matthieu Ricard, and Stephen LaBerge assess not only the fruits of inquiry from East and West but also shed light on the underlying assumptions of these disparate worldviews. Their essays creatively address a broad range of topics: from quantum theory's surprising affinities with the Buddhist concept of emptiness, to the increasing need in the West for a more contemplative science attuned to the first-person investigation of the mind, to the important ways in which the psychological study of "lucid dreaming" maps similar terrain to the cultivation of the Tibetan Buddhist discipline of dream yoga. |
Table des matières
1 | |
II | 31 |
III | 35 |
IV | 71 |
V | 87 |
VI | 91 |
VII | 107 |
VIII | 145 |
XI | 261 |
XII | 281 |
XIII | 285 |
XIV | 305 |
XV | 325 |
XVI | 365 |
XVII | 387 |
XVIII | 399 |