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This excerpt from

Zen and the Brain.


James H. Austin.
© 1999 The MIT Press.

is provided in screen-viewable form for personal use only by members


of MIT CogNet.

Unauthorized use or dissemination of this information is expressly


forbidden.

If you have any questions about this material, please contact


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Source Notes

I wish to express my appreciation to the following authors, their copyright own-


ers, and their publishers for permission to reprint excerpts from their copyrighted
works, as indicated here and as specified further in the reference pages:
University of Chicago Press, for the excerpt from Norman Maclean’s A River Runs Through
It, 1976, p. 61. James W. Hackett, for three haiku, selected from his The Zen Haiku and Other Poems
of J. W. Hackett. Tokyo, Japan Publications, 1983. Distributed in the United States by Kodansha
International, through Harper & Row, 10 E. 53rd St. New York, NY 10022.
Hunter House, for numerous citations to the work by Stanislav Grof in his LSD Psychother-
apy, originally published in 1980. (The publishers state that the 1994 edition can be ordered from
them at P.O. Box 2914 Alameda, CA 94501, or by calling 1-800-266-5592).
Nelson-Hall Publishers, for permission to cite quotations from a chapter by S. Grof, enti-
tled “Varieties of Transpersonal Experiences: Observations from LSD Psychotherapy,” pp. 311–
345, in the book edited by S. Dean Psychiatry and Mysticism (1975).
W. W. Norton, for verses in A. R. Ammon’s poem, “Gravelly Run,” from The Selected Poems,
Expanded Edition, copyright 1986.
Scribner, a division of Simon and Schuster, for the description by Charles Lindbergh,
selected from The Spirit of St. Louis; original copyright renewed 1981 by Anne Morrow
Lindbergh.
The James Thurber Literary Estate, for the quotation about eating, used by special permis-
sion of Rosemary Thurber.
Charles E. Tuttle Co., for the description of the Zen prototype person by Harold Stewart,
taken from his book, A Net of Fireflies; and also for his translation of the haiku, by Shoha, about
the faint scent of plum blossoms.
Portions of several chapters appeared in an earlier form in the journals indicated below,
and are used herein by permission. Chapters 7, 8, 9, and 32 appeared in The Eastern Buddhist
1991; 24(2): 69–97. Chapters 124, 125, and 126 appeared in Ultimate Reality and Meaning 1992;
15(1): 60–76. Chapter 146 appeared in The Theosophist 1996; 118(3): 117–120, published by The
Theosophical Publishing House, Adyar, Madras, 600 020, India.

The epigraphs appearing at the beginning of each part are taken from the following
sources:

Front: A. Einstein. In The Great Quotations, ed. G. Seldes. New York, Pocket Books, 1967, 816. H.
Thoreau. in Isaac Asimov’s Book of Science and Nature Quotations, eds. I. Asimov and J. Shul-
man. New York, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1988, 276.
Part I: J. VanRuysbroeck. In Mysticism, ed. E. Underhill. New York, Dutton, 1961, 334.
Part II: J. Donne. Holy Sonnets. Source uncited.
Part III: I. Pavlov. In Asimov and Shulman, ibid., 258.
Part IV: C. Jung. Psychology and Religion: West and East. Bollingen Series 20. New York, Pantheon,
1958, 544.
Part V: J. Burroughs. The Light of Day. Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1900. 63.
Part VI: D. Suzuki. Studies in Zen. New York, Dell, 1955, 136.
Part VII: Huang-po. In The Zen Teaching of Huang Po on the Transmission of Mind, ed. J. Blofeld.
New York, Grove, 1958, 92.
Part VIII: Master Dogen. In Dogen Kigen—Mystical Realist, H.-J. Kim. Tucson, University of Ari-
zona Press, 1975, 133.
This excerpt from

Zen and the Brain.


James H. Austin.
© 1999 The MIT Press.

is provided in screen-viewable form for personal use only by members


of MIT CogNet.

Unauthorized use or dissemination of this information is expressly


forbidden.

If you have any questions about this material, please contact


cognetadmin@cognet.mit.edu.

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