Skip to main content
editorial
. 2011 Jan-Dec;9(1):6–41. doi: 10.4103/0973-1229.77412

Table 5.

Some topics for study based on concepts of mind, consciousness and brain in Indian thought

Topics*
  1. Concept of Mind and Consciousness in the Indian Philosophies: An Overview

  2. Relevance of Indian Concept of Mind and Consciousness to World Philosophy

  3. Analytical study of the concept of Mind in the Indian philosophies

  4. Comparative study of Mind in Indian and Western thought

  5. Mind in the different darśanas

  6. Mind in the Upanigraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g021.jpgads

  7. Is Indian Thought on Mind and Consciousness Relevant Today?

  8. Jaina concept of Mind and Consciousness

  9. Mind and Consciousness in Carvāka thought

  10. Nyāya concept of Mind and Consciousness

  11. Mind and Consciousness according to Sri Aurobindo

  12. Mind and Consciousness for Rabindranath Tagore

  13. Phenomenal reality (prāgraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g022.jpgibhāsika-sattā), empirical reality (vyāvahārika-sattā), and absolute reality (pāramārthika-sattā)

  14. Vedānta, Mind and Consciousness

  15. Transcendental consciousness as “one only without a second” (ekameva advitīyam).

  16. Advaitic concept of mind and consciousness

  17. Buddhist concept of mind and consciousness

  18. Samkhya concept of mind and consaciousness

  19. Mind and consciousness for Swami Vivekananda

  20. Mind, Consciousness and Sri Krishnamurti

  21. Gandhi on Man, God and Consciousness

  22. Modern Indian Thinkers on Mind and Consciousness

  23. K.C. Bhattacharya and S. Radhakrishnan on Mind and Consciousness

  24. Mind and consciousness for Acharya Rajneesh

  25. Mind and Consciousness in Indian Thought of last two decades 1990-2010.

  26. The Future of Indian Thought on Mind and Consciousness

  27. Mind and Consciousness in the Brahma-sūtra of Bādarāyagraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g023.jpga

  28. The state of Sthitapragña

  29. Mind and Self in Indian thought

  30. Prājña of the deep-sleep state, Taijasa of the dream state, Viśva of the waking state

  31. Self above matter

  32. Tajjalān and kalpita

  33. Brahman and Ātman

  34. Ego (aham) and cidābhāsa, i.e. consciousness reflected in the internal organ

  35. Mind not identifiable with Self according to Indian thought

  36. Gaugraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g024.jpgapāda’s declaration, “upadeśād-ayagraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g019.jpg vādagraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g025.jpg” and “jñāte dvaigraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g022.jpgagraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g019.jpg na vidyate”

  37. Brahman/Ātman neither immanent nor transcendent

  38. Brahman/Ātman both immanent and transcendent

  39. Empirical-relational objects with class feature (jāti), quality (gugraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g023.jpga), action (kriyā), or relation (sambandha), and signified by a conventional word (graphic file with name MSM-9-6-g024.jpghi)

  40. The knower (pramātā), and the Self

  41. Negative scriptural concepts like “neti neti”

  42. Secular and sacred śabda

  43. Ultimate reality trans-empirical and trans-relational

  44. Antagraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g025.jpgkaragraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g023.jpga as internal sense organ

  45. The concept of manas

  46. Jiva, manas and ātman

  47. Vasanā, vairāgya and manas

  48. The state of sat-cit-ānanda

  49. Knower (jñātā), “I” (aham) and “this” (idam).

  50. Witness-consciousness (sākgraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g021.jpgi-caitanya),

  51. Pramāgraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g023.jpga and apramāgraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g023.jpga

  52. Distinguishing valid cognition (pramā) from erroneous (ābhāsa-jñāna)

  53. Consciousness as self-established (svatassiddha) and self-luminous and the transcendental a priori

  54. Upanigraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g021.jpgadic theory of three worlds

  55. Human being as material (jagraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g024.jpga) excepting the Self or Consciousness

  56. Mind a sentient entity carrying the reflection (pratibimba) or semblance (ābhāsa) of Consciousness

  57. The five organs of perception, the five organs of action [karmendriyas], the five vital breaths [pragraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g023.jpgas]

  58. The mind [manas], intellect [buddhi], egoity [ahamkāra] and the mind-stuff [citta]

  59. Waking experience (jāgrat), the world of dream experience (svapna), and the world of deep sleep experience (sugraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g021.jpgupti)

  60. Upanigraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g021.jpgadic tradition and the Fourth (caturtha) beyond the three worlds in item 59.

  61. Consciousness (cit) and experience (anubhava)

  62. Viśva, Taijasa and Prājña

  63. Triple Stream of Experience (avasthā-traya)

  64. “I” as knower (jñātā), as doer (kartā), as experiencer (bhoktā)

  65. Jiva and its kośas

  66. The Kośas: Annamaya [sheath of food and matter], pragraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g023.jpgamaya [sheath of vital breath], manomaya [mental sheath], vijñānamaya [intellectual sheath] and ānandamaya [the sheath of bliss], and what do they signify in understanding the Self

  67. Mind empowered with cognition of other objects, sense of “I” and “mine”, and also selfconscious when need arises

  68. Self-conscious mind and jīva

  69. Self or foundational Consciousness

  70. Self and the Mind

  71. Śagraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g020.jpgkara and jñāna-karma-adhikāra

  72. Consciousness as support (adhigraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g021.jpgthāna) of objects of the entire world

  73. Advaita Vedānta characterised as “transcendental phenomenology” and “metaphysics of experience”

  74. Advaita as both pluralistic and monistic

  75. Citta and samskāras

  76. Buddhi, ahamkāra and citta

  77. Patanjali Yoga and the eight fold path

  78. Buddha’s four noble truths and eight fold path

  79. Citta-vgraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g026.jpgtti-nirodha: how does it relate to the concept of Mind in Indian thought

  80. Citta and vgraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g026.jpgitts

  81. Ahamkāra [or egoism] and the Mind

  82. The state of mindlessness

  83. The state of mokgraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g021.jpga

  84. Kaivalya, Nirvagraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g023.jpga, Apavarga, Nihśreyasa

  85. The concept of liberation in the Indian philosophies

  86. Ātman and the Mind

  87. Configuration (avasthā), place (deśa), time (kāla), and qualities (gugraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g023.jpga)

  88. The concept of brain in Indian thought

  89. Ayurveda, mind and brain

  90. Body represented by the brain, mind represented by vijñāna and ātman represented by the life principle as making for the complete man

  91. The state of savikalpaka and nirvikalpaka samādhi

  92. The Gugraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g023.jpgas - Sattva, rajas, tamas - and the Self

  93. Advaita as affirming monism without denying pluralism

  94. Naigraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g021.jpgkarmya-siddhi of Sureśvara.

  95. Buddhi or cognition

  96. The concept of Citta

  97. The concept of dgraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g026.jpggraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g021.jpggraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g022.jpgi

  98. The Indriyas, Karmendriyas, and Jñānendriyas

  99. Jñāna or knowledge

  100. Smgraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g026.jpgti or memory

  101. Absolute Consciousness or turīya

  102. Mind as an internal organ of sense

  103. Mind as self

  104. Mind as not the self

  105. Mind as minute and subtle

  106. Mind as instrument of knowledge

  107. Mind as instrument of the soul

  108. Self-cognition of Mind

  109. Mind as cause

  110. Mind and dream experience

  111. Mind as reduced to a machine

  112. Sense organs and mind contact

  113. Vrtti or mental mode

  114. Self or Ātman or Soul

  115. Self as pure consciousness

  116. Vijñāna or discrimination

  117. Prajñā or intelligence

  118. Sannikargraphic file with name MSM-9-6-g021.jpga, or relation between mind, sense-organ and the object

  119. Samkalpa or power of conception.