Systems philosophy as a hermeneutic for buddhist teachings

Philosophy East and West 26 (1):21-32 (1976)
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Abstract

Convergences between systems philosophy, as developed from general systems theory and articulated by ervin laszlok, and buddhist thought suggest the possibility that the one can serve as a tool for interpreting the other. these convergences include their respective views of (1) reality as process, (2) interdependent causality, (3) the relation of mind to matter, and (4) the nonsubstantiality of the self. cybernetic models of cognitive process are applied to meditative practices of vipassana and mahayana visualizations, as an example of the reciprocal hermeneutic that is possible between these two bodies of thought

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