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The Buddhist Unconscious by W. Waldron

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 9:53 pm
by Nicholas Weeks
An important study of the Alaya consciousness, also in book form:

http://www.misterdanger.net/books/Buddh ... scious.pdf" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Re: The Buddhist Unconscious by W. Waldron

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 10:42 pm
by Nicholas Weeks
The blurb:
This work focuses upon an explicit notion of unconscious mind formulated by the Yogacara school of Indian Buddhism in a series of texts from the third to the fifth centuries CE. These texts describe and defend this “Buddhist” unconscious through a variety of exegetical and metapsychological arguments whose rationales are analyzed in terms of their historical and contemporary context. The work thus first presents the multivalent conception of consciousness (vijñana) within the early teachings of the Buddha, and then demonstrates how the Abhidharma emphasis upon momentary and conscious processes of mind was widely understood to make the continuity and multidimensionality of consciousness problematic in several crucial ways. The Yogacara thinkers addressed these multiple problems with a new model of mind centered upon the Buddhist unconscious, whose meaning and purpose is now made accessible to Western readers for the first time.

William S. Waldron received his PhD in Buddhist Studies from the University of Wisconsin after studying extensively in India, Nepal, and Japan. He currently teaches South Asian religions and Buddhist philosophy at Middlebury College, Vermont. His research areas include the Yogacara school of Indian Buddhism, and comparative psychologies and philosophies of mind.

Re: The Buddhist Unconscious by W. Waldron

Posted: Mon Mar 05, 2012 5:07 pm
by White Lotus
in his book, ''the zen doctrine of no mind'', suzuki looks at Mind or No Mind as he calls it as being the Buddhist ''unconscious''. he uses the terms no mind and unconscious to mean the same thing. there is the notion that when someone attains satori the unconscious and conscious become united. i dont know. the Buddhist use of ''unconscious'' includes all states of mind and all things. it is oneness. the psychologists use ''unconscious'' to describe a particular aspect of mentality or mental process. so the buddhist use of ''unconscious'' is unique to buddhism and has little or no reference to psychology's use of the term.

to talk of different aspects of consciousness, 8 of them is something yogacara does. in the final analysis there is one and only one. all things are this one, and this one does not exist except conventionally.

best wishes, Tom.