Consciousness
The Hard Problem & Cit
Chalmers asks why there is "something it is like" to be conscious. Vedānta asks: who is asking? A dialogue between philosophy of mind and the witness-consciousness of Advaita.
Coming soon
Reflections on consciousness, matter, time, and information at the meeting point of śruti and contemporary science – without forcing either into the other's mould.
We treat science as a method for disciplined observation and Vedānta as a method for disciplined self-inquiry. The aim is clarity, not synthesis for its own sake.
Consciousness
Chalmers asks why there is "something it is like" to be conscious. Vedānta asks: who is asking? A dialogue between philosophy of mind and the witness-consciousness of Advaita.
Coming soonPhysics
Quantum mechanics places the observer at the heart of measurement. Does this vindicate Vedānta? A careful examination of what physics actually says – and what it doesn't.
Coming soonCosmology
Modern cosmology asks what came "before" the Big Bang. Vedānta asks whether time itself is fundamental. Notes on temporal illusion and the eternal present.
Coming soonThese reflections do not claim that ancient ṛṣis anticipated modern physics. Nor do they dismiss science as mere māyā. The approach here is more modest: to let each discipline speak in its own voice, and to notice where genuine resonances – and genuine differences – appear.
Science describes the structure of appearance with extraordinary precision. Vedānta inquires into the nature of the one to whom all appearance appears. They are not the same inquiry, but they need not be enemies.