Notes
1. A selection of short articles during these intervening years includes:
• | Austin, J. 1991. Zen and the Brain: The Construction and Dissolution of the Self. The Eastern Buddhist. 24(2):69–97. | ||||
• | Austin, J. 2000. Consciousness Evolves When the Self Dissolves. Journal of Consciousness Studies. 7(11–12):209–230. | ||||
• | Austin, J. 2008. Selfless Insight-Wisdom; A Thalamic Gateway, pp 211–230 in Goleman, D., B. Lipton, C. Pert, G. Small, L. McTaggart, G. Braden, and J. Achterberg 2008. Measuring The Immeasurable; the Scientific Basis of Spirituality. Louisville, CO: Sounds True. | ||||
• | Austin, J. 2009. How Does Meditation Train Attention? Insight Journal. 23:16–32. | ||||
• | Austin, J. 2010. The Thalamic Gateway: How The Meditative Training of Attention Evolves Toward Selfless States of Consciousness, Chapter 15, pp 373–407 in Bruya, B. ed. 2010. Effortless Attention; A New Perspective in the Cognitive Science of Attention and Action. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. | ||||
• | Austin, J. 2010. Meditating Selflessly, Chapter 22, pp 417–431 in Kwee, M. ed. 2010. New Horizons in Buddhist Psychology. Chagrin Falls, OH. | ||||
• | Austin, J. 2012. Meditating Selflessly at the Dawn of a New Millennium. Contemporary Buddhism. 13:61–81. | ||||
• | Austin, J. 2013. Zen and the Brain: Mutually Illuminating Topics. Frontiers in Psychology. 4:1–9. | ||||
• | Austin, J. 2014. The Meditative Approach to Awaken Selfless Insight-Wisdom, pp 23–55 in Schmidt, S. and H. Walach eds. Meditation – Neuroscientific Approaches and Philosophical Implications. Berlin: Springer. | ||||
• | Austin, J. 2017. Old Joshu Lives On. Contemporary Buddhism. 18(1):72–88. |
2. Oxley, D., K. Smith, J. Alford, M. Hibbing, and J. Miller. 2008. Political Attitudes Vary with Physiological Traits. Science. 321:5896 (September 19, 2008), pp 1167–1670. Supplementary pages S1-S20.
3. See note 2 above.