FPMT Buddhist Mind Science

Language of the Course

English with translation into Spanish

Teachers

  • Marina Brucet
    Marina Brucet

    Marina Brucet holds a BA and a MA in Biochemistry and a PhD in Molecular Biology in Immunology from the University of Barcelona, where she also performed postdoctoral studies. After this, she decided to change research in the laboratory for research of the mind and its possibilities. To this aim, she completed a six-year full-time study program Masters Program of Advanced Buddhist Studies of Sutra and Tantra at Lama Tzong Khapa Institute, Italy. She studied with great Tibetan lamas such as His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Lama Zopa Rinpoche, Lama Jampa Monlam and Khensur Jampa Tegchok, amongst others, and has completed a one-year individual meditation retreat, among others. Presently, she combines continual development and meditation retreats with teaching meditation and Buddhist philosophy, at both general and specialized levels, with an approach that always takes into account the context and circumstances of Western life. She mainly teaches at Tushita Meditation Center Spain and other FPMT centers, and collaborates with SEE Learning (Emory University) in Spain.

  • Hans Burghardt
    Hans Burghardt

    Hans Burghardt holds a BA and a MA in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and a PhD from the University of Barcelona, where he spent seven years doing research. Since 2002, he meditates and is a student of great Buddhist masters including His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Kyabje Lama Zopa Rinpoche, Kirti Tsenshab Rinpoche, Lama Jampa Monlam, Khensur Jampa Tegchok amongst others. He has completed the Masters Program of Advanced Buddhist Studies of Sutra and Tantra at Istituto Lama Tzong Khapa (Italy) and has completed a one-year individual meditation retreat. He currently teaches meditation and Buddhism at Tushita Meditation Center Spain and other FPMT centers, and is co-founder and coordinator of the Initiative for an Emotional, Ethical, and Social Education, that promotes the establishment of Emory University’s SEE Learning in Spain.

Location

Online

Category

Date

02 Oct - 07 May
Expired!

Time

Definitive dates to be defined!
18:55 - 20:30

Places

Online,
Places Available

Buddhist Mind Science: Activating Your Potential

Watch the Open Day to Learn More About This Series!

On the 22nd of June we offered an Open Day online to learn more about this series together with Marina Brucet and Hans Burghardt, who developed it. Watch it here.

Traducción al castellano

Esta serie de cursos se ofrece con traducción simultanea al castellano. Ver la información de este serie en castellano. Si te interesa y quieres estar informado sobre esta serie y nuestras actividades puedes visitar regularmente nuestra web o inscribirte a nuestro boletín de noticias.

Discover the workings of the mind and the mechanisms of suffering and happiness. Unlock your potential for mental balance, compassion and wisdom.

   An FPMT Introductory Course


Welcome to this journey to unlock our potential and cultivate lasting happiness. Buddhism it is considered by some a “science of mind,” because it presents a comprehensive and deep description of the mind, it studies its various aspects and functions, and it provides methods to observe it directly and to discover and activate our inner potential. And it does so with one intention: to overcome suffering and its causes and to cultivate true, lasting happiness.

As interest in meditation in the modern world grows, the FPMT Wisdom Culture offers the series “Buddhist Mind Science: Activating Your Potential,” which introduces the Buddhist knowledge of the mind to provide practical techniques and insight on meditation, the mechanisms of suffering and happiness, finding purpose and mental balance, and how to discover and activate our inner potential for warmheartedness and wisdom, including a comparative modern scientific perspective and with the aim to contribute to the welfare in this world.

The Series

The series follows a gradual approach, with a strong experiential component that invites everyone to reflect and check by themselves the different topics presented along the courses. With a strong emphasis on transforming daily life in meaningful ways, it provides both Buddhist and scientific perspectives. It consists of seven courses that can be done as independent courses:

  1. Cultivating lasting happiness: What Buddhism and science have to say about it, is an exploration of purpose in life and what leads to dissatisfaction and suffering, and what to happiness, for oneself and others. It also explores the value of warmheartedness and wisdom, and it lays out the general foundation for the following modules.
  2. Transforming the mind to cultivate lasting happiness, focuses on meditation, mental balance, and emotions.
  3. Getting to know your mind, focuses on the mind.
  4. Fundamental trainings to cultivate lasting happiness, presents the foundations of the Buddhist paths.
  5. Wise paths to the heart, focuses on warmheartedness.
  6. The nature of perception, focuses on wisdom.
  7. Embodying warmheartedness and wisdom, explores how to bring the values of warmheartedness and wisdom into the world.

More Information

 

Requirements and Approach

There are no particular requirements to join this series.

The series is intended to address the needs of modern students, with a fact-based approach to the study of the mind and meditation:

  • It develops with a gradual approach that emphasizes practical integration in daily life.
  • It focuses on both Buddhist and scientific perspectives of the mind and meditation, in dialogue in the fields of meditation, the mind, compassion, or well-being, amongst others.
  • It is intended to provide meditation techniques to help people have more meaningful, beneficial, and happier lives.
  • It is designed for people who may or may not have experience with secular or other forms of meditation.

Structure

Sessions

Each course consists of four 1.5-hour online sessions and can be engaged as a stand-alone course. They include explanations, exercises, reflection, debate, meditation, and time for Q&A.  Recordings of the sessions will be made available to students.

Homework

During the week, students will be encouraged to keep a meditative practice, to read through some of the materials, and to complete some exercises. Even though this is not mandatory, it is highly encouraged as this will help make this course practical and relevant. 

Materials

The series includes a Course Manual for each course with readings, exercises and meditations, as well as recorded meditations. 

Schedule and dates

The different courses in the series take place online on Wednesdays from 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM CEST (UTC+2)

The courses will be carried out consecutively. The dates will be published well in advance:

  1. Cultivating lasting happiness: What Buddhism and science have to say about it – October 2 to 23
  2. Transforming the mind to cultivate lasting happiness – October 30 to November 20
  3. Getting to know your mind – November 27 to December 18
  4. Fundamental trainings to cultivate lasting happiness – January 8 to 28
  5. Wise paths to the heart – February 5 to 26
  6. The nature of perception – March 5 to 26
  7. Embodying warmheartedness and wisdom – April 16 to May 7

Co-Hosting Centers

Registration and Information

For registration, visit the page of each course or register for all courses here:

  1. Cultivating lasting happiness: What Buddhism and science have to say about it – October 2 to 23
  2. Transforming the mind to cultivate lasting happiness – October 30 to November 20
  3. Getting to know your mind – November 27 to December 18
  4. Fundamental trainings to cultivate lasting happiness – January 8 to 28
  5. Wise paths to the heart – February 5 to 26
  6. The nature of perception – March 5 to 26
  7. Embodying warmheartedness and wisdom – April 16 to May 7
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