The interface between Buddhist Studies and the uses of Buddhist principles and practices in psychotherapy and consciousness studies has attracted a growing interest from scholars and researchers of both Buddhism and psychology. This book examines the origins and expressions of Buddhist thought, and how it is now being utilized by psychologists and social scientists. The basic tenets of Buddhism and contemporary Buddhist-based empirical research in the psychological sciences are explained. Further emphasis is placed on current trends in the areas of clinical and cognitive psychology and on the Mahayana Buddhist understanding of consciousness with reference to certain developments in Consciousness Studies and Physics.
目次
About the Contributors [background] Foreword by HH the Dalai Lama Preface Acknowledgements Part 1: An Understanding of Consciousness from Traditional Buddhist Philosophical Perspectives The First-person Perspective in Postmodern Psychology John Pickering The Spiritual Significance of Emptiness in N?g?rjuna's M?lamadhyamakak?rik? William Ames A Comparative Study of the âlaya-vijñ?na as Seen from the Yog?c?ra and Dzogchen Perspectives David F. Germano and William Waldron Rangjung Dorje?s Variegations of Mind: Ordinary Awareness and Pristine Awareness in Tibetan Buddhist Literature Michael R. Sheehy Nirvà?a and Neuroscience: The Self-Liberating Brain Guy Claxton Vacuum States of Consciousness: A Tibetan Buddhist View B. Alan Wallace The Co-Emergence of the Knower and the Known: A Comparison between Madhyamaka and Kant's Epistemology Michel Bitbol The Bodhisattva?s Brain: Neuroscience and Happiness Owen Flanagan, Jr The Co-arising of Self and Object, World, and Society: Buddhist and Scientific Approaches William S. Waldron Tibetan Buddhism and Jungian Psychology Victor Mansfield Part 2: Mental Afflictions: Their Arising and Deconstruction. Section One Mindfulness in the Pàli Nikàyas Analayo The Transformative Impact of Non-Self Andrew Olendzki Tsong-kha-pa?s Gradual Path System for Ending Mental Afflictions and his Methods for Countering Anger James Apple Western Science Meets Eastern Wisdom to Experience Bodily Feelings Michael S. Drummond Zen Koan and Mental Health: The Art of Not Deceiving Yourself Mu Soeng Buddhism in the West: The Primacy of Meditation Practice Christopher D. Tori Section Two Destructive Emotions Daniel Goleman Finding the Middle Way: A Multi-Domain Model of Meditation in the Treatment of Compulsive Eating Jean Kristeller and James W. Jones Mindfulness Meditation in the Prevention and Treatment of Addictive Behaviors G. Alan Marlatt, Sarah Bowen, George A. Parks, Anil Coumar Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Depression John D. Teasdale The Psychological Processes Underlying Mindfulness: Exploring the Link Between Buddhism and Modern Contextual Behavioral Psychology Steven C. Hayes, Chad Shenk, Akihiko Masuda, Kara Bunting Buddhist Practice and Emotional Intelligence: Finding the Convergence Joseph Ciarrochi Mindfulness and Enactment in Psychoanalysis Jeremy D. Safran Contribution of Modern Psychological Methods to the Attainment of Buddhist Goals Marvin Levine Epilogue: Where We Are and Where We Are Likely to Go Christopher D. Tori and D. K. Nauriyal