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Website up on Monday

Today the computer guy came to my office and installed the new MacMini. Unfortunately, the monitor adapter did not work too tell and so he took the computer back and will bring a replacement on Monday. So the website has to wait until Monday.

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Bad news

Last Monday (September 11) was a disaster for the Center for Ethics of Science and Technology. The server that hosts the website of the Center at http://www.stc.arts.chula.ac.th crashed so badly that it was not possible to retrieve any data. So we have to start building up the website again. If you come by this blog wondering what is happening with the website, you got the answer. We expect to get a new machine and get the website up and running in the next few days.

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Searle and Buddhism on the Mind and the Non-Self

Today, 03:28 PM

In works such as Rediscovery of the Mind, and Mind, Language and Society, Searle holds famously that the mind is a biological phenomenon. He states: “Consciousness is, above all, a biological phenomenon. Conscious processes are biological processes.” I would like to argue in this paper that Searle’s view here does not necessarily contradict the Buddhist conception of mind and its close corollary the doctrine of Non-Self (anaatman), the idea of the chain series of causes and effects that all together constitute a purported entity designable as the mind, self or consciousness without thereby an inherent, enduring Self being posited. Furthermore, except for the Buddhist insistence on the actuality of the process of reincarnation, which Searle does not accept, the two positions share quite a lot in common. Two traditions of Buddhism, namely that of the Theravaada Abhidharma and the Mahaayaana, will be referred to in order to substantial the claims of Buddhism in relation with an analysis of Searle’s thought on the matter.

Searle’s view of the mind does not necessarily contradict the Buddhist teaching because Searle seems to be talking only about mind in its concrete manifestation, for example as the source of thinking, feeling, etc. Consciousness in Searle and in Buddhism in this case share many same characteristics together, most notably of which is that the content of consciousness is always changing and is intentional, and that one cannot find a deep core, the ‘homunculus’ inside the body or the brain. Another similarity between Searle and the Buddhist conception is that both reject Cartesian dualism.

However, there is one issue where Searle and Buddhism appears to be difference from each other and at first the gap seems so vast it is not reconcilable. The difference lies in the Buddhist teaching on the identity of the person or on the continuity of causal chains that constitute one’s karmic fruits that, depending on some important conditions, continues after bodily death. According to the scientific world view that Searle subscribes to, the mind is a function of the brain and consequently does not seem to survive the death of the latter. Nevertheless, I intend to argue here that Searle’s view does not necessarily preclude the possibility that consciousness might exist in some form after death of the brain. If he is willing to expand his epistemological apparatus somewhat and include the possibility of what Buddhists have consistently taken to be a source of knowledge, then his view and the Buddhist would be remarkably similar.

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Body and Mind: Science and Spirituality Perspectives

The Thousand Stars Buddhism and Science Group, together with the CESt, are organizing an international conference on “Body and Mind: Science and Spirituality Perspectives” at Room 105, Maha Chulalongkorn Building, Chulalongkorn University, on December 6-8, 2006. For more details please go to http://www.thousand-stars.org/TSBSG/bodymind.html.

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ภาษาไทย

นี่เป็นการทดสอบบล็อกภาษาไทย

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Thoughts for today

The next activity of the CEST will be a meeting of Buddhist schoalars and practitioners and a group of physicists at Room 708, Boromratchakumari Building, Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University. This is an event of the Thousand Stars Buddhism and Science Group (TSBSG), a group created to engage in dialogs between Buddhist scholars and scientists. The date is June 23, 2006 from 1 to 4 pm.

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Center for Ethics of Science and Technology

The Center for Ethics of Science and Technology (CEST), Chulalongkorn University was established on March 7, 2006 as a research unit to undertake research on various aspects of ethics of science and technology, including bioethics, computer ethics, ethics of biotechnology, ethics of nanotechnology, and so on. This is the Center’s official blog. The CEST’s website is at http://www.stc.arts.chula.ac.th/.

The plan is to publish up-to-date news, events and activities on this blog. These will be faster than the website itself, so please check the blog often.

Soraj Hongladarom