This new volume from the Foundation of Buddhist Thought series, provides a stand-alone and systematic - but accessible - entry into how Buddhism understands the mind. Geshe Tashi, an English-speaking Tibetan monk who lives in London, was trained from boyhood in a traditional Tibetan monastery and is adept in communicating this classical training to a modern Western audience.
Buddhist Psychology addresses both the nature of the mind and how we know what we know. Just as scientists observe and catalog the material world, Buddhists for centuries have been observing and cataloging the components of inner experience. The result is a rich and subtle knowledge that can be harnessed to the goal of increasing human well being.
This is definitely a must have for any studying Buddhist of the Tibetan tradition. Geshe Tashi Tsering explains the Gelug's way of understanding the mind perfectly.
“love, according to buddhism, is wishing someone to be happy. it is nothing more than that. it is not attachment or lust; it is a simple and beautiful emotion.”
Cover topics: mind in Buddhism, mind and mental factors, mental afflictions, dealing with negative emotions, wholesome mental factors, conception and perception, knowledge,