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Ashish Dalela

    Cet auteur explore la profonde connexion entre la science et le sens, cherchant à dépasser les limites d'une explication purement physique de la réalité. Son travail se concentre sur l'intégration du sens comme principe fondamental dans divers domaines scientifiques, des mathématiques aux neurosciences. L'auteur postule que la science nécessite une refonte conceptuelle pour décrire scientifiquement les objets symboliques et les intégrer dans notre compréhension de la nature. Les thèmes clés tournent autour de l'indéterminisme, de l'incomplétude et de l'incertitude en science, ainsi que de l'intégration du sens et de la matière dans la philosophie védique.

    Conceiving the Inconceivable Part 2: A Scientific Commentary on Vedānta Sūtras
    Semantic Reasoning: A Scientific Commentary on Nyāya Sūtras
    Western Questions Eastern Answers: A Collection of Short Essays - Volume 4
    Conceiving the Inconceivable Part 1: A Scientific Commentary on Vedānta Sūtras
    Western Questions Eastern Answers: A Collection of Short Essays - Volume 3
    Time and Consciousness: Cyclical, Hierarchical, and Causal Notions of Time
    • Questions about the nature of time have always been an important part of physics and philosophy, but they have never been resolved satisfactorily. This book discusses eight such questions: -Does Time Pass?-How Does Time Pass?-Do the Past and the Future Change the Present?-Does Time Pass Uniformly?-Is Time Absolute or Relative?-Is Time Discrete or Continuous?-Is Time Reversible or Irreversible?-Is the Universe Eternal or Cyclical?These problems span classical mechanics, thermodynamics, atomic theory, relativity, and geometry, but the fundamental issues of the past and the future influencing the present are present in experience. To address the paradoxes of objectivity and subjectivity, we split causality into three questions-what, how, and why-and attribute them to time, matter, and observers. This leads us to a hierarchical, closed, and cyclical view of space and time. Causality is not just in matter; it is also in time and in observers; but the three kinds of causalities are different as answers to different questions. A tripartite causal model overturns the assumptions about space, time, causation, and natural laws in modern science; but this shift is imperative to address all the questions of time satisfactorily.

      Time and Consciousness: Cyclical, Hierarchical, and Causal Notions of Time
    • It is commonly believed that the nature of God cannot be discussed scientifically, because science applies only to matter. This book challenges this assumption and defines God as perfection and discusses 12 qualities that constitute perfection. These qualities can be applied to anything, but in this book, they are applied to the idea of the perfection of knowledge. What is perfection in knowledge? That knowledge which is consistent, complete, simple, parsimonious, necessary, sufficient, empirical, operational, instrumental, stable, and novel, is perfect. These 12 qualities are organized in six pairs in the Vedic philosophical description of God, and called knowledge, beauty, renunciation, power, wealth, and heroism. By discussing the nature of perfection, identifying how this world also carries such perfection partially (but never completely), we can understand how God is complete perfection.

      The Science of God: The Twelve Principles of Perfection