Bibliography

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Secondary Literature: Books and Articles on Jamesian and Eastern Thought

Ames VM. 1954. Zen and pragmatism. Philosophy East and West 4(1): 19-33.

Ames VM. 1959. William James and Zen. Psychologia 2(2): 114-119.

Bricklin J. 2003. Sciousness and con-sciousness: William James and the prime reality of non-dual experience. Journal of Transpersonal Psychology 35(2): 85-110.

Bricklin J (ed). 2007. Sciousness. Guilford, CT: Eirini Press.

Friedl H. 2001. Global aspects of American pragmatist thinking: William James and Kitaro Nishida on the purity of pure experience. Amerikastudien 46(2): 177-205.

Gunawardane N. 2001. The nature of experience in William James and Buddha. Streams of William James 3(3): 10-12.

Kalupahana DJ. 1987. The principles of Buddhist psychology. Albany, NY: SUNY Press.

Krueger JW. 2006. The varieties of pure experience: William James and Kitaro Nishida on consciousness and embodiment. William James Studies 1(1). [FULL TEXT]

Mathur DC. 1978. The historical Buddha (Gotama), Hume, and James on the self: comparisons and evaluations. Philosophy East and West 28(3): 262-270.

Odin S. 1996. The social self in Zen and American pragmatism. Albany, NY: SUNY Press.

Rosch E. 2002. How to catch James's mystic germ: religious experience, Buddhist meditation and psychology. Journal of Consciousness Studies 9(9-10): 37-56.

Scott D. 2000. William James and Buddhism: American pragmatism and the Orient. Religion 30(4): 333-352.

Shaw M. 1987. William James and Yogācāra philosophy: a comparative inquiry. Philosophy East and West 37(3): 223-244.

Taylor, E. 1978. Psychology of religion and Asian studies: the William James legacy. Journal of Transpersonal Psychology 10(1): 66-79.

Taylor. E. 1986. Swami Vivekananda and William James. Prabuddha Bharata: Journal of the Ramakrishna Society, Calcutta 91: 374-385.

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