James H. Austin

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. James H. Austin is an American neurologist and author. He is the author of the book Zen and the Brain. It establishes links between the neurophysiology of the human brain and the practice of meditation, and won the Scientific and Medical Network Book Prize for 1998.[1] He has written five sequels: Zen-Brain Reflections (February, 2006), Meditating Selflessly (2009) Selfless Insight (2009), Zen Brain Horizons (2014) and Living Zen Remindfully (2016).

Career

Austin has been an academic neurologist for most of his career, first at the University of Oregon Medical School, then as chairman of neurology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. He is currently Emeritus professor of neurology at the University of Colorado Medical School, Denver and visiting professor of neurology at the University of Florida School of Medicine. His publications number over 140 articles involving research in the areas of clinical neurology, neuropathology, neurochemistry and neuropharmacology.[2]

Experience with Zen

Austin has been a practicing Zen Buddhist since 1974. He began in Kyoto at Daitokoji as a student of the [Rinzai]] roshi Kobori Nanrei Sohaku.[2]

After eight years of regular Zen meditation, Austin experienced the taste of what Zen practice calls kensho. The chief characteristic of this experience was a loss of the sense of "self" which is so central to human identity, plus a feeling that "Just This" is the way all things really are in the world. While he was on a sabbatical in England, he was waiting for a subway train when he suddenly entered a state of enlightenment unlike anything he had ever experienced. In Austin's words, "It strikes unexpectedly at 9 am on the surface platform of the London subway system. [Due to a mistake] ... I wind up at a station where I have never been before...The view includes the dingy interior of the station, some grimy buildings, a bit of open sky above and beyond. Instantly the entire view acquires three qualities: Absolute Reality, Intrinsic Rightness, Ultimate Perfection."

" With no transition, it is all complete....Yes, there is the paradox of this extraordinary viewing. But there is no viewer. The scene is utterly empty, stripped of every last extension of an I-Me-Mine [his name for ego-self]. Vanished in one split second is the familiar sensation that this person is viewing an ordinary city scene. The new viewing proceeds impersonally, not pausing to register the paradox that there is no human subject "doing" it. Three insights penetrate the experient, each conveying Total Understanding at depths far beyond simple knowledge: This is the eternal state of affairs. There is nothing more to do. There is nothing whatsoever to fear."

Austin writes that when his former subjective self was no longer there to form biased interpretations this experience conveyed the impression of "objective reality.”As a neurologist, he interpreted this experience not as proof of a reality beyond the comprehension of our senses but as arising from the brain itself. This and other experiences and research led him to write Zen and the Brain.[3]

Bibliography

  • AUSTIN, James H, 2016 "Living Zen Remindfully": Retraining Subconscious Awareness. MIT Press, Cambridge MA.
  • AUSTIN, James H, 2014 "Zen Brain Horizons: Toward a Living Zen." MIT Press, Cambridge MA.
  • AUSTIN James H., 2011 Meditating Selflessly: Practical Neural Zen. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA
  • AUSTIN James H., 2009 Selfless Insight: Zen and the Meditative Transformations of Consciousness. MIT Press.
  • AUSTIN James H., 2006 Zen Brain Reflections:Reviewing Recent Developments in Meditation and States of Consciousness." MIT Press.
  • AUSTIN James H., 2003 Chase, Chance and Creativity: The Lucky Art of Novelty. MIT Press.
  • AUSTIN James H., 1998 Zen and The Brain: Toward an Understanding of Meditation and Consciousness. MIT Press

Notes and references

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  1. 2 ""Zen Brain faculty"":

External links

  • Austin's website
  • Interview with Austin by MIT Press
  • Michael Haederle. This is Your Brain on Zen. Tricycle 19 (1) 58-61; 113-214, Fall 2009.
  • Richard Boyle. Realizing Awakened Consciousness,2015. Appendix pages 293-302. Interview with Neuroscientist James Austin.