Acknowledgments |
ix |
Foreword by His Holiness the Dalai Lama |
1 |
A Prelude to the Journey |
3 |
Charting Ego's Shadow Zones |
5 |
Cross-Cultural Dialogue and the Mind and Life Conferences |
8 |
Chapter 1: What's in a Self? |
11 |
A History of the Concept of Self |
11 |
Self-Exploration and Modernity |
14 |
Science and the Self |
16 |
The Self and Humanism |
18 |
Non-Self in the West |
19 |
Chapter 2: Brain's Sleep |
23 |
Sleep in Neuroscience |
23 |
Early Ideas |
24 |
The Basics of the EEG |
24 |
Sleep Patterns |
27 |
Characterizing REM Sleep |
30 |
Dreaming and REM |
32 |
Sleep in Evolutionary Perspective |
33 |
Why Do We Sleep? |
35 |
Dreams in the Tibetan Tradition |
38 |
Dissolution in Sleep and Death |
43 |
Are There Correlates of Subtle Mind? |
45 |
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Intention and Effort in Practice |
48 |
Sleep, Orgasm, and Death |
49 |
Awareness and Discontinuities |
50 |
Chapter 3: Dreams and the Unconscious |
53 |
Psychoanalysis in Western Culture |
53 |
Freud and Company |
54 |
A Topography of the Mind |
55 |
Dreaming and the Unconscious |
56 |
Narcissism |
60 |
Dreams, the Royal Road to the Unconscious |
61 |
Marie-Jos�e's Story |
66 |
Beyond Freud |
76 |
Is There an Unconscious in Buddhist Teaching? |
79 |
On the Complex Inheritance of Mental Tendencies |
82 |
Foundation Consciousness and the Unconscious |
86 |
Imprints and the "Mere-I" |
88 |
More on Mere Identities |
90 |
Gross and Subtle Mind |
92 |
Conventional Designation |
95 |
Psychoanalysis as Science? |
98 |
Chapter 4: Lucid Dreaming |
101 |
Evidence for Lucidity |
101 |
How Common Is Lucidity? |
103 |
Traits of Lucid Dreamers |
104 |
Inducing Lucid Dreaming |
106 |
Lucidity and Witnessing |
107 |
Chapter 5: Levels of Consciousness and Dream Yoga |
111 |
The Notion of a Self |
111 |
Self and Action |
113 |
Motivation for Action Is Mental |
115 |
Levels of Consciousness |
118 |
Types of Causal Connections |
119 |
Foundation Consciousness |
120 |
Continuity of Levels |
122 |
Mental Factors and Sleep |
123 |
Clear Light, Subtle Self |
124 |
The Cycle of Embodiments |
126 |
Dream Yoga |
127 |
Chapter 6: Death and Christianity |
131 |
Christianity and the Love of God |
131 |
Death in the Christian Tradition |
132 |
Attitudes Toward Death in the West |
134 |
Secular Attitudes Toward Death |
135 |
Chapter 7: What Is Bodily Death? |
137 |
The Western Medical Definition of Death |
137 |
A Buddhist Definition of Death |
140 |
Interlude: A Conversation on Body Transplants |
141 |
Brain Death |
144 |
Brain Correlates of Consciousness |
146 |
Alterations of Consciousness |
148 |
Epilepsies |
154 |
Epilepsy and Tibetan Medicine |
158 |
Indications of Death in the Tibetan Tradition |
161 |
Stages of Death |
162 |
Gross and Subtle Levels of Mind |
164 |
Gross and Subtle Sexual Intercourse |
171 |
Transference of Consciousness |
173 |
Experimental Occasions for Subtle Mind |
175 |
Chapter 8: Near-Death Experiences |
177 |
Death as Rite of Passage |
177 |
Exploring the Edge of Death |
178 |
Archaeology of Death Rituals |
180 |
Western Discovery of the Afterlife |
181 |
Testimonies and Their Patterns |
182 |
Detailed Nature of Near-Death Experiences |
188 |
Feelings and Sensations |
191 |
Core Experiences |
193 |
Company and Well-Being |
197 |
Some Materialistic Perspectives |
198 |
Possession and Epilepsy |
202 |
Near-Death Experiences and Buddhist Teachings |
204 |
Near-Death Experiences and the Clear Light |
208 |
Coda: Reflections on the Journey |
215 |
Winding Down |
215 |
What We Learned |
215 |
Return |
218 |
Appendix: About the Mind and Life Institute, Acknowledgments |
219 |
Notes |
225 |
Glossary |
227 |
Contributors |
243 |
Index |
247 |
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