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Zen and the Brain : Toward an Understanding of Meditation and Consciousness.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: The MIT Press SeriesPublisher: Cambridge : MIT Press, 1998Copyright date: ©1999Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (868 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780262267465
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Zen and the BrainDDC classification:
  • 294.3/422
LOC classification:
  • BQ9288 -- .A96 1998eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Intro -- Contents in Brief -- Chapters Containing Testable Hypotheses -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- By Way of Introduction -- Is There Any Common Ground between -- Zen and the Brain? -- A Brief Outline of Zen History -- But What Is Zen? -- Mysticism, Zen, Religion, and Neuroscience -- Western Perspectives on Mystical Experiences -- Is Mysticism a Kind of Schizophrenia in Disguise? -- The Semantics of Self -- Constructing Our Self -- Some ABCs of the -- The Zen Mirror: Beyond Narcissism -- and Depersonalization -- Where Does Zen Think It s Coming From? -- What Is Meditation? -- Ryoko-in, Kyoto, 1974 -- Zazen at Ryoko-in -- Attention -- The Attentive Art of Meditation -- Restraint and Renunciation -- Zen Meditative Techniques and Skills -- Physiological Changes during Meditation -- Brain Waves and Their Limitations -- The EEG in Meditation -- Breathing In -- Breathing Out -- The Effects of Sensorimotor Deprivation -- Monks and Clicks: Habituation -- The Koan and Sanzen: Kyoto, 1974 -- A Quest for Non-Answers: Mondo and Koan -- The Roshi -- The Mindful, Introspective Path toward Insight -- Inkblots, Blind Spots, and High Spots -- Sesshin and Teisho at Ryoko-in, 1974 -- Sesshin -- The Meditative Approach to the Dissolution of the Self -- Brain in Overview: The Large of It -- Brain in Overview: The Small of It -- Brain in Overview: Coordinated Networks Synthesizing -- Higher Functions -- The Orienting Reflex and Activation -- Arousal Pathways in the Reticular Formation and Beyond -- Acetylcholine Systems -- The Septum and Pleasure -- The Attachments of the Cingulate Gyrus -- The Amygdala and Fear -- Remembrances and the Hippocampus -- Visceral Drives and the Hypothalamus -- Biogenic Amines: Three Systems -- GABA and Inhibition -- Peptides -- The Brain s Own Opioids.
Ripples in the Next Cell: Second and Third Messengers -- The -- Withdraws -- Matters of Taste -- The Mouse in Victory and Defeat -- The Central Gray: Offense, Defense, and Loss of Pain -- The Third Route: Stress Responses within the Brain -- The Large Visual Brain -- Where Is It? The Parietal Lobe Pathway -- What Is It? The Temporal Lobe Pathway -- What Should I Do About It? The Frontal Lobes -- Ripples in Larger Systems: Laying Down and -- Retrieving Memories -- The Thalamus -- The Reticular Nucleus -- The Pulvinar -- Higher Mechanisms of Attention -- Looking, and Seeing Preattentively -- Laboratory Correlates of Awareness, Attention, Novelty, -- and Surprise -- Biological Theories: What Causes Mystical Experiences? -- How Does Meditation Act? -- Problems with Words: Mind -- Ordinary Forms of Conscious Awareness -- Variations on the Theme of Consciousness -- Alternate States of Consciousness: Avenues of Entry -- The Architecture of Sleep -- Desynchronized Sleep -- Other Perspectives in Dreams -- Lucid Dreaming -- Conditioning: Learning and Unlearning -- Other Ways to Change Behavior -- The Awakening from Hibernation -- Tidal Rhythms and Biological Clocks -- The Roots of Our Emotions -- The Spread of Positive Feeling States -- Pain and the Relief of Pain -- Suffering and the Relief of Suffering -- Bridging the Two Hemispheres -- The Pregnant Meditative Pause -- Side Effects of Meditation: -- The Light -- Bright Lights and Blank Vision -- Faces in the Fire: Illusions and Hallucinations -- Stimulating Human Brains -- The Ins and Outs of Imagery -- The Tachistoscope -- The Descent of Charles Darwin: Computer Parallels -- Bytes of Memory -- Where Is the Phantom Limb? -- The Feel of Two Hands -- The Attentive Cat -- Emotionalized Awareness without Sensate Loss -- Seizures, Religious Experience, and Patterns of Behavior.
The Fleeting Truths of Nitrous Oxide -- The Roots of Laughter -- How Do Psychedelic and Certain Other Drugs Affect -- the Brain? -- Levels and Sequences of Psychedelic Experience after LSD -- The Miracle of Marsh Chapel -- How Do Psychedelic Drugs Affect Amine Receptors? -- Near-Death Experiences -- Far-Death Attitudes -- Triggers -- The Surge -- First Zen-Brain Mondo -- Vacuum Plenum: Kyoto, December 1974 -- The Leaf: Coda -- The Semantics of Samadhi -- The Vacuum Plenum of Absorption: An Agenda of Events -- to Be Explained -- The Plunge: Blankness, Then Blackness -- The Hallucinated Leaf -- Space -- The Ascent of Charles Lindbergh: Ambient Vision -- The Ambient Vision of Meditative Absorption -- The Sound of Silence -- The Loss of the Self in Clear, Held Awareness -- The Warm Affective Tone -- Motor and Other Residues of Internal Absorption -- The When and Where of Time -- Gateway to Paradox -- Second Zen-Brain Mondo -- Dimensions of Meaning -- Authentic Meanings within Wide-Open Boundaries -- Word Problems: Oneness and Unity -- How Often Does Enlightenment Occur? -- A Taste of Kensho: London, 1982 -- What Is My Original Face? -- Major Characteristics of Insight-Wisdom in Kensho -- Prajna: Insight-Wisdom -- Suchness -- Direct Perception of the Eternally Perfect World -- The Construction of Time -- The Dissolution of Time -- The Death of Fear -- Emptiness -- Objective Vision: The Lunar View -- Are There Levels and Sequences of Nonattainment ? -- Preludes with Potential: Dark Nights and Depressions -- Operational Differences between Absorption -- and Insight-Wisdom -- Reflections on Kensho, Personal and Neurological -- Selective Mechanisms Underlying Kensho -- Third Zen-Brain Mondo -- The State of Ultimate Pure Being -- The Power of Silence -- Beyond Sudden States of Enlightenment -- The Exceptional Stage of Ongoing Enlightened Traits.
Simplicity and Stability -- An Ethical Base of Zen? -- Compassion, the Native Virtue -- Etching In and Out -- Aging in the Brain -- The Celebration of Nature -- Expressing Zen in Action -- The Other Side of Zen -- Still-Evolving Brains in Still-Evolving Societies -- Commentary on the Trait Change of -- Ongoing Enlightenment -- In Closing -- Introduction to the -- Selections from -- Suggested Further Reading -- Glossary -- References and Notes -- Source Notes -- Index.
Summary: A neuroscientist and Zen practitioner interweaves the latest research on the brain with his personal narrative of Zen.
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Intro -- Contents in Brief -- Chapters Containing Testable Hypotheses -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- By Way of Introduction -- Is There Any Common Ground between -- Zen and the Brain? -- A Brief Outline of Zen History -- But What Is Zen? -- Mysticism, Zen, Religion, and Neuroscience -- Western Perspectives on Mystical Experiences -- Is Mysticism a Kind of Schizophrenia in Disguise? -- The Semantics of Self -- Constructing Our Self -- Some ABCs of the -- The Zen Mirror: Beyond Narcissism -- and Depersonalization -- Where Does Zen Think It s Coming From? -- What Is Meditation? -- Ryoko-in, Kyoto, 1974 -- Zazen at Ryoko-in -- Attention -- The Attentive Art of Meditation -- Restraint and Renunciation -- Zen Meditative Techniques and Skills -- Physiological Changes during Meditation -- Brain Waves and Their Limitations -- The EEG in Meditation -- Breathing In -- Breathing Out -- The Effects of Sensorimotor Deprivation -- Monks and Clicks: Habituation -- The Koan and Sanzen: Kyoto, 1974 -- A Quest for Non-Answers: Mondo and Koan -- The Roshi -- The Mindful, Introspective Path toward Insight -- Inkblots, Blind Spots, and High Spots -- Sesshin and Teisho at Ryoko-in, 1974 -- Sesshin -- The Meditative Approach to the Dissolution of the Self -- Brain in Overview: The Large of It -- Brain in Overview: The Small of It -- Brain in Overview: Coordinated Networks Synthesizing -- Higher Functions -- The Orienting Reflex and Activation -- Arousal Pathways in the Reticular Formation and Beyond -- Acetylcholine Systems -- The Septum and Pleasure -- The Attachments of the Cingulate Gyrus -- The Amygdala and Fear -- Remembrances and the Hippocampus -- Visceral Drives and the Hypothalamus -- Biogenic Amines: Three Systems -- GABA and Inhibition -- Peptides -- The Brain s Own Opioids.

Ripples in the Next Cell: Second and Third Messengers -- The -- Withdraws -- Matters of Taste -- The Mouse in Victory and Defeat -- The Central Gray: Offense, Defense, and Loss of Pain -- The Third Route: Stress Responses within the Brain -- The Large Visual Brain -- Where Is It? The Parietal Lobe Pathway -- What Is It? The Temporal Lobe Pathway -- What Should I Do About It? The Frontal Lobes -- Ripples in Larger Systems: Laying Down and -- Retrieving Memories -- The Thalamus -- The Reticular Nucleus -- The Pulvinar -- Higher Mechanisms of Attention -- Looking, and Seeing Preattentively -- Laboratory Correlates of Awareness, Attention, Novelty, -- and Surprise -- Biological Theories: What Causes Mystical Experiences? -- How Does Meditation Act? -- Problems with Words: Mind -- Ordinary Forms of Conscious Awareness -- Variations on the Theme of Consciousness -- Alternate States of Consciousness: Avenues of Entry -- The Architecture of Sleep -- Desynchronized Sleep -- Other Perspectives in Dreams -- Lucid Dreaming -- Conditioning: Learning and Unlearning -- Other Ways to Change Behavior -- The Awakening from Hibernation -- Tidal Rhythms and Biological Clocks -- The Roots of Our Emotions -- The Spread of Positive Feeling States -- Pain and the Relief of Pain -- Suffering and the Relief of Suffering -- Bridging the Two Hemispheres -- The Pregnant Meditative Pause -- Side Effects of Meditation: -- The Light -- Bright Lights and Blank Vision -- Faces in the Fire: Illusions and Hallucinations -- Stimulating Human Brains -- The Ins and Outs of Imagery -- The Tachistoscope -- The Descent of Charles Darwin: Computer Parallels -- Bytes of Memory -- Where Is the Phantom Limb? -- The Feel of Two Hands -- The Attentive Cat -- Emotionalized Awareness without Sensate Loss -- Seizures, Religious Experience, and Patterns of Behavior.

The Fleeting Truths of Nitrous Oxide -- The Roots of Laughter -- How Do Psychedelic and Certain Other Drugs Affect -- the Brain? -- Levels and Sequences of Psychedelic Experience after LSD -- The Miracle of Marsh Chapel -- How Do Psychedelic Drugs Affect Amine Receptors? -- Near-Death Experiences -- Far-Death Attitudes -- Triggers -- The Surge -- First Zen-Brain Mondo -- Vacuum Plenum: Kyoto, December 1974 -- The Leaf: Coda -- The Semantics of Samadhi -- The Vacuum Plenum of Absorption: An Agenda of Events -- to Be Explained -- The Plunge: Blankness, Then Blackness -- The Hallucinated Leaf -- Space -- The Ascent of Charles Lindbergh: Ambient Vision -- The Ambient Vision of Meditative Absorption -- The Sound of Silence -- The Loss of the Self in Clear, Held Awareness -- The Warm Affective Tone -- Motor and Other Residues of Internal Absorption -- The When and Where of Time -- Gateway to Paradox -- Second Zen-Brain Mondo -- Dimensions of Meaning -- Authentic Meanings within Wide-Open Boundaries -- Word Problems: Oneness and Unity -- How Often Does Enlightenment Occur? -- A Taste of Kensho: London, 1982 -- What Is My Original Face? -- Major Characteristics of Insight-Wisdom in Kensho -- Prajna: Insight-Wisdom -- Suchness -- Direct Perception of the Eternally Perfect World -- The Construction of Time -- The Dissolution of Time -- The Death of Fear -- Emptiness -- Objective Vision: The Lunar View -- Are There Levels and Sequences of Nonattainment ? -- Preludes with Potential: Dark Nights and Depressions -- Operational Differences between Absorption -- and Insight-Wisdom -- Reflections on Kensho, Personal and Neurological -- Selective Mechanisms Underlying Kensho -- Third Zen-Brain Mondo -- The State of Ultimate Pure Being -- The Power of Silence -- Beyond Sudden States of Enlightenment -- The Exceptional Stage of Ongoing Enlightened Traits.

Simplicity and Stability -- An Ethical Base of Zen? -- Compassion, the Native Virtue -- Etching In and Out -- Aging in the Brain -- The Celebration of Nature -- Expressing Zen in Action -- The Other Side of Zen -- Still-Evolving Brains in Still-Evolving Societies -- Commentary on the Trait Change of -- Ongoing Enlightenment -- In Closing -- Introduction to the -- Selections from -- Suggested Further Reading -- Glossary -- References and Notes -- Source Notes -- Index.

A neuroscientist and Zen practitioner interweaves the latest research on the brain with his personal narrative of Zen.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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