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INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR

ON

Mind, Brain and Consciousness

| How to Prepare Abstract |

| Abstracts Accepted |


Topics for the Seminar


Topics for the Workshops



Honorary International Advisory Board

About The Seminar

Mind, Brain and Consciousness

Introduction

Purpose

Mind and Consciousness

The Brain

Workshops

The Goal, And Bridging the Gap


Programme and Speakers

Seminar Details

Registration Fees

Registration Form

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About Us

Accommodation


Pre-seminar lecture series

Abstracts Accepted


Consciousness, Cognition and Cognitive Apparatus

R. Balasubramanian*

Abstract:

A human being is a complex entity consisting of the Self (also known as Consciousness), mind, senses, and the body.  The Vedanta tradition holds that the mind, the senses and the body are essentially different from the Self or Consciousness. It is through consciousness that we are able to know the things of the world, making use of the medium of the mind and the senses. Further, the mind, though material, is able to reveal things, borrowing the light from consciousness. From the phenomenological point of view, we have to answer the following questions: how does one know the mind/the mental operations/the cogitations of the mind? Does the mind know itself? Is it possible? There is, again, the problem of the intentionality of conspicuousness. Is consciousness intentional? According to Vedanta, consciousness by its very nature is not intentional; but it becomes intentional through the mind. The mind or the ego is not part of the consciousness; on the contrary, it is transcendent to consciousness. It is difficult to spell out the relation between consciousness and the mind. How is consciousness, which is totally different from the mind, gets related to the mind in such a way that it makes the latter capable of comprehending the things of the world? The Vedanta tradition provides the answer to this question in terms of the knower-known relation. Consciousness is pure light, self-luminous by its very nature, i.e., while it reveals other objects, it is not revealed by anything else. When Sartre describes it as nothingness, bereft of even ego, it is to show that it is pure light revealing objects outside it.

Key-Words:

Consciousness, Self; Vedanta tradition; Mind; Self; Intentionality

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*President, Afro-Asian Philosophy Association. 5 Bhagirathi Street, Srinivasa Avenue, Chennai 600 028. 

Final Accepted Int Seminar MBC, 14-15 Jan 2009