(T2) Gynoids and actroids, female robots, are advancing rapidly to serve humans.
"Form" usually means body. But it is not limited to visible or tangible bodies. It is called "form" because it includes subtle bodies not seen by the denser eye faculty but visible to the refined mental faculty. The form group actually includes four things, qualities of materiality spoken of for the sake of simplicity as the Four Great Elements (solidity, extension, energy, cohesion) and derived elements. These subatomic elements can be seen directly in deep meditation and understood at the profoundest level without recourse to high tech equipment.
- Anyone is capable of becoming a buddha. But to do so is such a herculean endeavor as to be almost impossible. It is enough to make the best use of the Buddha's Teachings. That is to say, if we all wished for it, vowed to complete it, and strove diligently from this day forward, it would be aeons before even one of us were able to accomplish that kind of supreme teachable enlightenment. We would have to wait until this dispensation ended, then rediscover the ultimate truth, and revealing it by establishing a new dispensation of the Dharma in the world, which would have long since forgotten the Teachings of the historical Buddha.
"Consciousness" (viññana or vijnana) in a very technical sense is defined pragmatically as being of six kinds. Consciousness is awareness through the six sense. "Mind" is not a thing but rather a dynamic process. If form or materiality is only the interplay of the Four Great Elements (the major qualities and their derivatives) then mind or mentality is only the interplay of these four formless constituents of being. Together they comprise the Five Aggregates of Clinging.
This is a fancy way of saying that mental processes are interdependent: They interact with one another, arising based on a material (kama) and, more importantly, a fine-material (rupa) base.
With impingement on a physical and/or a fine-material base (which means impingement is not limited to the gross flesh we touch and are well aware of but rather to more subtle conceptions of form), there arises sensation (pleasant, unpleasant, or neutral). The brain, which is not the contents of the skull, is also a sense organ: It receives mental impressions not available to five ordinary senses.
Interestingly the development of "higher" faculties, what we commonly refer to as "psychic" abilities, depends in part on the physical base. The physical eye-base is responsible, when activated and developed, for clairvoyance, the ear clairaudience, and so on.
Of course, subtle sights and subtle sounds are not perceived through the eyes and ears. But they share a base of derived-materiality such that their subtle forms are discerned by the mind, a faculty capable of perception with a physical basis not in the cranium. But it is a matter of degree, for they are received in the same way, as impulses that eventually get processed in the brain like ordinary sights and sounds.
The base of consciousness is not in the head. The "mind door" is very specifically located in another part of the body, which cultures throughout the world have long known, but which we are led away from by modern neuroscience that increasingly focuses us to search above the neck.
- But rather than thinking about, speculating on, or merely contemplating these things and whether they are true or not, it is far more useful to develop (bhavana) direct-knowledge (jnana). The Dharma is here for realization not for wholesome discussion, and especially not for unwholesome discussion. The Truth will not do a person good who does not put that Truth into practice as truth. To talk about it without practicing for realization is like reading a menu without ever eating.
This depth of Buddhist teaching is alive and well in Burma, which more than any other country, more so since it was blocked off from the world by a police state dictatorship, preserved, practiced, and developed the Abhidharma.
See in particular the freely available teachings of the modern enlightened Buddhist master Pa Auk Sayadaw, paauk.org. We cannot say nearly as much for the dominant Burmese dry-insight tradition advocated by Mahasi Sayadaw, which ignores the Buddha's emphasis on "right concentration," (samma-samadhi) defined by the Buddha as the development of the first four absorptions (dhyana) as the basis for successful insight (vipassana).
- Kokoro: kokoro-dreams.co.jp
- Sanrio: sanrio.co.jp
- Inst. of Advanced Industrial Science and Tech."HRP-4C": video
- Press release: aist.go.jp
- Intelligent Robotics Lab: is.sys.es.osaka-u.ac.jp
- Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? engadget.com