claim
active
claim:the-buddhist-notion-of-awakening-as-stable-realisation-of-emptiness-can-be-understood-as-the-embodied-recognition-of-this-impossibilityThe Buddhist notion of awakening, as stable realisation of emptiness, can be understood as the embodied recognition of this impossibility.
Core bridging claim between physics and contemplative traditions.
Source paper
extracted_from(2026) · Lars Sandved-Smith · Chris Fields · Thomas Doctor · Ruben Laukkonen +1
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Papers (1)
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Concepts (1)
concept
- The process by which an agent realizes through practice that the self-environment boundary is unevidenceable, leading to awakening.
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- The paper's core proposal linking physics to Buddhist philosophy.
- Direct equivalence claim between model reduction and enlightenment.
- The stable experiential recognition of emptiness; the paper frames it as embodied recognition of the impossibility of self-evidence.
- Proposed identification between philosophical traditions enabling formal translation of contemplative insight
- The philosophical/contemplative idea that all phenomena lack inherent, independent existence.
- Empirical prediction from the model: brain dynamics change after the transition.
- Buddhist philosophical framework in which emptiness (śūnyatā) refers to the lack of inherent self-nature; here linked to the non-evidenceability of a bounded self.
- Equivalence claim between prior removal and emptiness.