Mind as Mirror and The Mirroring of Mind (Buddhist Reflections on Western Phenomenology)

Mind as Mirror and The Mirroring of Mind (Buddhist Reflections on Western Phenomenology)

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Book Specification

Item Code: NAE742
Author: Steven W. Laycock
Publisher: Sri Satguru Publications
Language: English
Edition: 1997
ISBN: 8170305314
Pages: 351
Cover: Hardcover
Other Details 9.0 inch x 6.0 inch
Weight 500 gm

Book Description

About the Book

“What I like most about this book is its remarkable breadth; the author’ astonishingly thorough mastery of the work of both Buddhist thinkers and Continental phenomenologist’s; the integrative approach which goes beyond mere comparison and works with basic problems in such a way as to bring in ideas where they are relevant, whatever their source; a fairness and balance in the critical discussion of writers with whom the author may not be in agreement; and the author’s success in making even the most abstract problems relevant to everyday life.

Rooted in the insights of Madhyamika dialectic and an articulated Zazen phenomenology, this study uncovers and examines the methodological presuppositions undergirding the work of Husserl, Sartre, and Merleau-Ponty and calls into serious question certain of the most fundamental assumptions of the Western phenomenological tradition regarding the nature of mind. Mind as Mirror and the Mirroring of Mind presents, for the first time, a searching and distinctively Buddhist challenge to the Western phenomenology’s—a challenge, that is, to grow beyond the settled alternative assumptions that the mind either is or is not minor-like in its experience of phenomenal reality.

About the Author

Steven Laycock is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toledo. He is co-editor of Essays for a Phenomenological Theology. An active member of the Buddhist Society for Compassionate Wisdom, he has, for many years, been engaged in Buddhist meditative practice.

Contents

Acknowledgments XI
An Incident at Wang-Mei Shan 1
Prelude in the Key of Emptiness 3
Frameworks 3
Mirroring and Representation 3
A Paradox of Phenomenological Optics 6
The Dialectic of Mirroring 10
The Thesis of Phenomenal Undesirability 16
Com(mens)uration 18
I. Mind as Mirror 25
The Muteness Mirror: Reflections on Buddhist Dialectic 29
Analytic and Dialectic Phenomeno-Logic 29
Ex/planation 31
Absolute and Relative ‘Space” 33
Reflective Negativity 35
Buddhist Dialectics 37
Distinguished Distinctions 39
Archaic Distinctions 41
Deconstructing the Minor 43
The Mirror of Mind 46
Reflections 48
Visible Invisibility 49
Instantiation and Manifestation 50
Analytic Thought 52
The Thing-in Itself 53
Bivalence and the Real 54
The Pathless Path: Reflections on Buddhist Meditative Practice 61
Tranquillity and Insight 61
The Formal Absorptions 64
Toward a Critique of Pure Suffering 65
Discursive Thought 73
The Formless Absorptions 78
The Hierarchy of Concretion 84
Infinite Divisibility 88
Dependent Co-origination 93
The Lotus and the Chiasm 98
The Body and the Body Tree 105
II. The Mirroring of Mind 113
The Gateless Gate: Reflections on the Methodology of Reflection 117
Phenomenology and Its Word’ 117
Mirror as Metaphor 122
The ‘Madness” of Phenomenological Method 125
Presuppositionlessness 132
The Modes of Reflection 135
Reflections on Reflection 140
The Eidetic Reduction 143
Hyper-Reflection 147
The Great Doubt 149
The Transformative Phenomenology of Liberation 154
Mindless Minding: Reflections on Intentionality 163
The Mystery of Consciousness 163
The Rupture of Immanence 173
Reduction and the Immanence of Intentionality 180
The World-Horizon 181
The Ego as Reflection 187
The Ego as Gestalt 193
Diary of a Moon Gazer 201
Notes 205
Bibliography 301
Index of Subjects 319
Index of Names 336

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