And more...
"Likewise, resting in a state of consciousness in which the tendency
towards reification is temporarily suspended does not result in any of the
benefits of the union of quiescence and insight into the ultimate nature of
reality. William James may have been referring to this in his discussions of
"pure experience," which he characterized as "plain, unqualified actuality, or
existence, a simple _that_," prior to the differentiations of subject and
object and of mind and matter." Buddhist contemplative insight is better
characterized as becoming lucid during the waking state. In this truly
"awakened" state of consciousness, we not only stop reifying phenomena, we
directly perceive their empty nature, recognizing that all things exist only as
dependently related events arising relative to a cognitive frame of reference."
(Wallace, B. Alan, 'Hidden Dimensions: The Unification of Physics and
Consciousness',p.100)
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