Buddhist Philosophy and the Embodied Mind : A Constructive Engagement

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Buddhist Philosophy and the Embodied Mind : A Constructive Engagement

  • ウェブストア価格 ¥7,756(本体¥7,051)
  • Rowman & Littlefield(2024/03発売)
  • 外貨定価 US$ 40.00
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  • ポイント 140pt
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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 196 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781538160145
  • DDC分類 294.3365

Full Description

In the last 30 years, embodied, embedded, enactive, and extended (4E) accounts of mind and experience have flourished. A more cosmopolitan and pluralistic approach to the philosophy of mind has also emerged, drawing on analytic, phenomenological, pragmatist, and non-Western sources and traditions. This is the first book to fully engages the 4E approach and Buddhist philosophy, drawing on and integrating the intersection of enactivism and Buddhist thought.

This book deepens and extends the dialogue between Buddhist philosophy and 4E philosophy of mind and phenomenology. It engages with core issues in the philosophy of mind broadly construed in and through the dialogue between Buddhism and enactivism. Indian philosophers developed and defended philosophically sophisticated and phenomenologically rich accounts of mind, self, cognition, perception, embodiment, and more. As a work of cross-cultural philosophy, the book investigates the nature of mind and experience in dialogue with Indian and Western thinkers. On the basis of this cross-traditional dialogue, the book articulates and defends a dynamic, non-substantialist, and embodied account of experience, subjectivity, and self.

Contents

Acknowledgements

Introduction

On Comparative Philosophy
Overview of the Chapters

Enacting Selves

No-Self
Buddhist Reductionism
Four Problems for Buddhist Reductionism
The Dependent Origination of Sentient Beings
Sentience and Subjectivity
Subjectivity and Self
Self-Making
Conclusion

Luminosity

Luminosity
Self-Luminosity and Other-Luminosity
Dual-Aspect Reflexivism
Temporality
Dynamic Embodied Nondual Awareness

Agency and Other Minds

Karma
Agentless Agency
Enactive Agency
Psychological Agency
Other Minds
Conclusion

Enacting Worlds

The Co-Emergence of Self and World
Enacting Worlds
Enaction, Emptiness, and Realism
The Three Natures of Phenomena

Cultivating Compassion

The Saṃsāric Framework
Bodhicitta, Empathy, and Open Intersubjectivity
Meditative Concentration
The Four Point Mind Training

Equality of Self and Other
The Limits of Self-Cherishing
The Benefits of Altruism
Exchange of Self and Other

Conclusion

Bibliography