This article presents an account of the mind as found in pre-philosophical and philosophical Śaiva and Śaiva-Śākta literature and examines some important terms that the English word translates, notably, citta, cit, and manas, although there are others, mostly in the medieval or post-Gupta period. Through such inquiry, we see an ambivalent attitude towards the category mind, on the one hand, being a cause of bondage, while, on the other, being elevated to the highest ontological category. Such an examination raises interesting historical questions about influences on the Śaiva and Śaiva-Śākta material and interesting philosophical questions about the category mind in relation to the category of the person
This thesis is an attempt to read the philosophy of Shankara (788-820) through an analysis of concep...
The present study is an attempt to trace the development and philosophical implications of the Buddh...
This dissertation traces the development and modifications of tur(\u27)iya and the catuspad doctrine...
This paper attempts to make a critical analysis of the nature of mind in the Awakening of Mahayana F...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015This dissertation is an in-depth study of the dispute ...
Unknown to most Western psychologists, ancient Indian scriptures contain very rich, empirically deri...
The intellectual tradition of India includes many psychological concepts, theories and techniques th...
In recent decades, historians of religions have turned to, and developed, entirely new methodologies...
This paper is a thesis which is divided into two parts, each part lending support to the understandi...
The concepts of consciousness and cognition are central to Hindu philosophy. The major concepts that...
This chapter considers the literature associated with explorations of consciousness in Indian philos...
This article is an investigation into how Kamalaśīla, an eminent Indian Buddhist scholar in the eigh...
This dissertation consists of a translation of the Agamādhikāra of the Īśvara Pratyabhijñā Vivrti Vi...
The philosophical interpretation of the Buddhist concept of consciousness and stratification of its ...
The paper argues that within social sciences, efforts to represent the "other " are simult...
This thesis is an attempt to read the philosophy of Shankara (788-820) through an analysis of concep...
The present study is an attempt to trace the development and philosophical implications of the Buddh...
This dissertation traces the development and modifications of tur(\u27)iya and the catuspad doctrine...
This paper attempts to make a critical analysis of the nature of mind in the Awakening of Mahayana F...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015This dissertation is an in-depth study of the dispute ...
Unknown to most Western psychologists, ancient Indian scriptures contain very rich, empirically deri...
The intellectual tradition of India includes many psychological concepts, theories and techniques th...
In recent decades, historians of religions have turned to, and developed, entirely new methodologies...
This paper is a thesis which is divided into two parts, each part lending support to the understandi...
The concepts of consciousness and cognition are central to Hindu philosophy. The major concepts that...
This chapter considers the literature associated with explorations of consciousness in Indian philos...
This article is an investigation into how Kamalaśīla, an eminent Indian Buddhist scholar in the eigh...
This dissertation consists of a translation of the Agamādhikāra of the Īśvara Pratyabhijñā Vivrti Vi...
The philosophical interpretation of the Buddhist concept of consciousness and stratification of its ...
The paper argues that within social sciences, efforts to represent the "other " are simult...
This thesis is an attempt to read the philosophy of Shankara (788-820) through an analysis of concep...
The present study is an attempt to trace the development and philosophical implications of the Buddh...
This dissertation traces the development and modifications of tur(\u27)iya and the catuspad doctrine...