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Editorial Reviews
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How about getting a plain-English rendition of the latest in brain
research and psychology from the leading lights in the field? Or a succinct
explanation of the Buddhist view of consciousness from the Dalai Lama himself?
No need to choose. When the second Mind and Life conference convened in
1989, East and West became collaborators in understanding consciousness.
Antonio Damasio, neurologist and author of The Feeling of What Happens,
Larry Squire, psychiatrist and author of Memory: from Mind to Molecules,
and Lewis Judd, director of the National Institute of Mental Health, sat
down with other scholars and scientists for face-to-face talks with the
Dalai Lama. Although late in coming, the result is this tidy volume of
eager exchange and cross-cultural bridge building. Each specialist first
summarizes the latest in research and then accepts questions from and poses
questions to the Dalai Lama, acting representative of Buddhism's extraordinarily
sophisticated views on consciousness, dreams, memory, meditation, and that
stickiest of points, rebirth. The inevitable collision of scientific materialism
and Buddhist emptiness isn't avoided, but neither is it fatal, serving
instead as motivation for further conversations. Step up to the roundtable
and set your mind spinning. --Brian Bruya
Book Description
This book addresses some of the most fundamental and troublesome questions
that have driven a wedge between the realms of Western science and religion
for centuries.
The publisher,
Snow Lion Publications, Inc. , November 9, 1999
The Dalai Lama
meets with Western neuroscientists.
This book addresses some of the most fundamental and troublesome questions
that have driven a wedge between the realms of Western science and religion
for centuries. Consciousness at the Crossroads is the result of a series
of meetings between the Dalai Lama and a group of eminent neuroscientists
and psychiatrists. The Dalai Lama regularly dedicates several days out
of his busy schedule to engage in these kinds of meetings, which have resulted
in more than a decade of fruitful dialogue between... |