As John mentioned earlier, the Society for Neuroscience invited the Dalai Lama to keynote their (huge) annual conference in DC, and out of general interest I ponied up for a nonmember registration and drove down from Pittsburgh. The talk kicked off an annual series on the potential dialogue between neuroscience and ’empirical’ meditation knowledge bases such as Buddhism, although some neuroscientists protested what they saw as science inappropriately endorsing a particular religion.
Contrary to the critics, the Dalai Lama (known as His Holiness, HHDL, or by his original name Tenzin Gyatso) seems to me the perfect choice to keynote a discussion between neuroscience and traditional mind-body knowledge. HHDL’s Mind and Life Institute has facilitated dialogue between eastern and western students of the mind since 1987, and he has written two books that strongly argue in favor of accomodating modern science in spiritual life.
For those who are interested, here’s a brief rundown of what I gleaned from his talk.

