Preface
Introduction
1 First There Is a Mountain
2 Buddhism and the Science of Race
3 Two Tibetans
4 The Science of Buddhism
5 The Meaning of Meditation
Conclusion: Measuring the Aura
Notes
Index
"This fascinating book provides a new way of understanding the various discussions of Buddhism and science that have taken place over the past 150 years. Lopez not only gives an account of the diverse claims made for the scientific credibility of Buddhism, but in the process offers deep insights into the complex relations among science, religion, and Western modernity. The science and religion field would be vastly enriched by more studies such as this."-Peter Harrison, University of Oxford
"Lopez, whose book is more a history of the discourse between Buddhism and science than an examination of how the two inform each other, makes much of the Dalai Lama''s doctrinal flexibility. He suggests that this stems partly from the Tibetan leader''s desire to show that his religion is not the primitive superstition that many nineteenth-century European writers-and modern Chinese communists-have described. Perhaps so, but it must also derive from the Buddhist desire to know reality and not hide behind false assumptions about the world or our own nature."-Nature
"For philosophers and cognitive scientists interested in psychological and ethical improvement Lopez's new book is must reading. Mind scientists report that Buddhists are especially happy and serene. What does this mean? Are concepts such as `suffering,' `happiness,' and `equanimity' understood the same in Buddhism and in science? Lopez is exactly the right historian to take us on this expert tour of the Buddhism and science dialogues as they have developed over the past two centuries in the West. At a time when glib enthusiasts for Buddhism and science claim vindication through the other, Lopez is the wise historically sensitive voice who asks us to reflect on which science, which Buddhism we are talking about."-Owen Flanagan, Duke University
Donald S. Lopez Jr. is the Arthur E. Link Distinguished University Professor of Buddhist and Tibetan Studies in the Department of Asian Languages and Cultures at the University of Michigan. He is the author or editor of a number of books, including
Prisoners of Shangri-La,
The Madman’s Middle Way, and
Critical Terms for the Study of Buddhism, all published by the University of Chicago Press.
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Imprint: University Of Chicago Press
Distributor: Chicago Distribution Center
Publication Date: 11-01-2008
Pages: 278
Measurements: 9.00in X 6.00in