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Oneness Talks

Nondualism, also called nonduality and sometimes monism, is a polyvalent term originating in Indian philosophy and religion, where it is used in various, related contemplative philosophies which aim to negate dualistic thinking or conceptual proliferation (prapanca) and thereby realize nondual awareness, 'that which is beyond discursive thinking', a state of consciousness described in contemplative traditions as a background field of unified, immutable awareness that exists prior to conceptual thought.

The English term "nonduality" is derived from the Sanskrit Hindu term "advaita" (अद्वैत), "not-two" or "one without a second," meaning that only Brahman, 'the one', is ultimately real while 'the world', or the multiplicity of thought-constructs, 'the second', is not fully real; and from the Buddhist term advaya, which is also literally translated as "not two" and has various applications, including the Madhyamaka negation of thinking in opposites such as ordinary, conventional truth versus ultimate truth, and in Yogachara the deconstruction of the "apprehension of sensory objects as separate from the perceiving consciousness."

A perennialist view posits that nondual awareness, despite fundamental differences in the explanatory frameworks, is a common essence in various religious traditions. According to this view, nondual awareness is not only paradigmatic for Hindu advaita-traditions including Advaita Vedanta and Kashmir Shaivism, and Buddhist advaya-traditions including Yogachara, Madhyamaka, Zen and Dzogchen, but can also be found in Taoist philosophy, and in Western philosophy, Christian mysticism, and Sufism.

Nondualism is also used to refer to the satsang movement, also called neo-advaita, for which nonduality is a central tenet, emphasizing sudden awakening or insight. The term may also refer to monism and nonplurality, the idea of a unitive essence behind the multiplicity of distinct entities. Related definitions include interconnectedness interdependence, and holism or 'wholism', the idea that "all the things "in" the world are not really distinct from each other but together constitute some integral whole." Further definitions are the rejection of thinking in binary opposites such as the mind–body dualism, while "nondualism" is also used as a synonym for mysticism, mystical experience, and spirituality.

From Nondualism on Wikipedia

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Title Speaker

Particle After Particle Samadhi: Tassajara Life

Serial: BZ-00404A

Saturday Lecture

Tassajara Zen Mountain Center, Samadhi, Concentration, Tassajara Zen Mountain Center...
Nov 24 1984
Berkeley Zen Center

Ego and Personality

Serial: BZ-00390A

Saturday Lecture

Ego, Birth-and-Death, Ego, Offering, Bowing, Samadhi, Discrimination, Evil, Anger,...
Jun 30 1984
Berkeley Zen Center

Mumonkan Case #14 Pt. II: Ordinary Mind Is the Way

Serial: BZ-01520A

Saturday Lecture

Ordinary Mind, MM-14, Oneness, Ordinary Mind, Discrimination, Mindfulness, Non-...
Nov 19 1983
Berkeley Zen Center

Breathing and Posture in Zazen

Serial: BZ-00402B

One-Day Sitting

Zazen, Posture, Repentance, Patience, Oneness, Concentration, Bell, Karma
Sep 17 1983
Berkeley Zen Center

The Book of Serenity

Serial: BZ-00242

Class 4 of 5

Hate, Oneness, Subject-and-Object, Discrimination, Attachment, Non-attachment, Non-...
4
Berkeley Zen Center

Unknown Title, Serial 01182

Birth-and-Death, Absolute-and-Relative, Religion, Don't Know Mind, Big Mind,...

Heart Sutra

Practice Period, Conversation, Heart Sutra, Tassajara Zen Mountain Center, Oneness,...
Jun 28 1997
Berkeley Zen Center

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