EFTA00810775.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 393.2 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 7 pages
Consciousness, Science, Technology, and Society
Shanghai, June 7-9, 2017
CSTS June 2017 will be a three-day event, devoted to the exploration of
consciousness in all its aspects, and particularly the intersection between
consciousness with modern science and technology, and the social impacts of this
intersection. The event will consist of a one-day conference with short TED-style
talks and two days of in-depth workshops (described below). Eastern and Western
perspectives will be balanced and constructive synergies between these
perspectives will be explored. Attendees will also have the opportunity to contribute
original ideas toward the design of a second CSTS event that will be held in Shanghai
later in the year.
East Meets West: The CSTS Vision
Based in China and hosted by Crystal Globe, the CSTS event series will take an
Eastern approach toward understanding consciousness and bring together leading
experts from the East and West to explore the science that relates mind, body, and
behavior. CSTS will showcase new technologies, products, and services that
promote mental and emotional well being, ultimately for the benefit of society.
The key difference between Eastern and Western thought is that the core of
Western knowledge has emerged from a dualistic understanding of mind and matter
while Eastern science and philosophy is nondual (Atman). From the Eastern
perspective, all experience finds its origins in consciousness (including first, second,
and third person experiences) and consciousness is primary. This approach to
knowledge is based upon personal investigation and practices toward direct
experiential knowing (e.g., practices such as breathing techniques, meditation,
visualizations, chanting, etc.), while the western approach to knowledge is rooted in
materialism, focused primarily on observed (third person) experiences, and based
upon theories, ideas, and a conceptual understanding.
By taking an Eastern approach, first person experiences are honored (dreams,
altered states, psychosis, etc.) and second person research methodologies (inter-
subjective engagement, collaboration) become possible. In Asia, there is over 2500
years of experimentation and exploration based upon a nondual foundational
premise (Advaita, Dzogchen, Zen, Taoism). Also prominent in the Eastern approach
is the role of nature and our relationship within it.
EFTA00810775
CSTS will bring together the greatest minds from the East and West to advance the
collective field of knowledge toward greater understanding. This event series will
encourage the development of new technologies, products, and services with
particular focus in the areas of education, mental health, creativity, innovation,
entrepreneurship, and management. This kind of cross-cultural knowledge
exchange is necessary to address the many thorny problems facing today's global
society, and to bring about a shift toward a more harmonious future.
Day Long Conference:
Elisabet Sahtouris
Bronislav Vinogradskiy
Ornella Corazza
Reza Sanaye
Jeffery Martin
Nicoletta lacobacci
Robert Alexander
William Chang
Ben Goertzel
Piotr Boltuc
Kevin O'Regan
Alexander Graur
Wayne Silby
John Marshall Roberts
Adrian Belic
CSTS June 2017: Workshops
Mind and Nature: Eastern and Western Approaches
German Philosopher Karl Jaspers identified the years from the 8th to 3rd century BC
as a pivotal 'Axial Age' for mankind, a period when the religions and philosophies
that underlie our modern World were first conceived in and shared by Persia, India,
China, Greece, Egypt and Rome. With the colonization of the World over the past
two hundred years by the West, its advancements in science, materialism,
capitalism, and today's globalization enabled by technology, the religions and
philosophies of old have lost their true meaning and power.
EFTA00810776
Globalization can be seen as a natural evolutionary process. However, if it is truly to
succeed, it must respect the world's multicultural diversity of thought and
knowledge, find common guiding values, and engage in healthy dialogue that
permits checks and balances insuring the wellbeing of all people and our planet. I
Every culture has had a guiding story of who we humans are and in what kind of
universe we live. According to Joseph Campbell, such a functioning 'mythology'
serves four functions. 1) The Mystical Function: To open up a realization of the
mystical dimension (realization of a transcendent mystery source behind the
surface phenomenology of the World); 2) The Cosmological Function: To
understand the material world (an understanding that is consistent with
contemporary knowledge); 3) The Sociological Function: To validate and maintain a
certain specific social order of the current society; and 4) The Pedagogical
Function: To guide individuals harmoniously through the inevitable crisis of stages
of life. At the end of his life, Campell called for a myth for the entire world, one for
all cultures and our planet Earth.
Today's military and economic conflicts, along with the devastating conflict between
man and nature, can all be traced back to the differences between the different core
approaches to understanding the world and our role in it. In this workshop, we will
explore the differences between Eastern and Western thought toward the
development of a contemporary vision of a global society.
As science has replaced religion in the secular societies of today, we will look
specifically at how the foundational concepts of our universe and how it can best be
understood have differed in the sciences of East and West. Western science for
example, posits a material universe that can be studied objectively, with
consciousness a late emergent product of advanced nervous systems, while Vedic
science posits a participatory conscious universe within which matter forms and
evolves as part of the greater Consciousness field. Islamic science posits a living
universe and Taoist science focuses on the role of humanity within Nature and
Cosmos. Most indigenous cultures developed their own sciences, only now being
discovered by contemporary society.
When we acknowledge this rich diversity of understanding from the Axial Age until
now, we see humanity poised on the brink of a new maturity in which hostilities can
give way to harmonies with apparently limitless creative potential if we shift our
attention and resources to building a world that works for all.
Elisabet Sahtouris
Bronislav Vinogradskiy
Jamie Hubbard
Jyoti Kumar
Ornella Corazza
Mohammad Reza Sanaye
Apurve Mehra
EFTA00810777
EFTA00810778
Personal Development, Mental Health, and Human Potential
Our experiences shape the beliefs that motivate our actions. Although we do not
fully understand the mechanisms of how experiences encode beliefs within the
body, it is clear that the mind and body are interrelated. A newborn baby acts from
innate behaviors and gradually develops a sense of a "separate self," and a mental
(symbolic) model of reality. Ultimately, the mechanisms for constructing and acting
from this mental model are physiologically based. Early experiences such as
childhood trauma can have a profound impact on personal development, and mental
health.
The East and West look at the mind-body relationship very differently. In the West,
Wilhelm Reich first identified that five different personality types correlated to
different physical postures and body shapes. Symptoms are primarily addressed
either chemically with pharmaceuticals, or via psychotherapy. In Traditional
Chinese Medicine (TCM), emotions are associated with different organs of the
body. Emotional trauma leads to a stagnation of "qi," or life force and energy, and
addressed in a more holistic manner. The recognition in Taoist science of matter,
energy, mind/heart/soul (Ong, qi, shen) as the integral human, as well as all nature
is clearly distinguished from the western view that mind emerges from matter at
advanced stages of evolution.
Although society rewards high-achievers whether it is in academics, sports,
musicianship, or entrepreneurship, there are many people who, through their
unique experiences in life, have developed skills that stretch our understanding of
the human potential. Superior autobiographical memory, synesthesia, non-symbolic
states of consciousness, pain management, and temperature control are just a few of
the abilities that have been reported and studied.
This workshop will explore the mind body relationship from the perspective of
personal development, human potential, and its relationship with mental
health. We will also explore methods for personal transformation and healing, from
Eastern and Western perspectives.
Gino Yu
Jeffery Martin
Lamont Tang
David Sauvage
John Marshall Roberts
Ornella Corazza
(Xiong Zeng Xiang)
(Li Si Ceng)
(Math Prodigy)
EFTA00810779
Artificial Intelligence and Consciousness
Al systems are achieving more and more in the practical world, and the grand quest
to create Artificial General Intelligence is being taken more and more seriously. The
risks and benefits of advanced Al for human society are also being hotly debated in
all quarters.
But what about machine consciousness? If a digital computer is created with a
human-like cognitive architecture and human-like intelligence, will it have human-
like consciousness? What if instead it is a quantum computer, or a synthetic-biology
computer, or a brain-machine hybrid computer? What will we be able to learn
about the nature of consciousness by creating and studying synthetic systems and
connecting them to human brains and bodies? Should we think about the
consciousness of an engineered system in a reductive, materialist way or otherwise?
And how closely connected are the questions of machine consciousness and
machine ethics? Can an Al without human-like consciousness truly empathize with
people? Might deep empathy with humans be part of the path to human-like
machine consciousness?
The Workshop on AI and Consciousness will consider these issues and more, from a
variety of perspectives.
The workshop will open with a keynote by Ben Goertzel (from the AGI Society, the
OpenCog Foundation and Hanson Robotics), titled "Can Als Feel
Compassion?". This will be followed with a series of talks including one by Shuo
Chen reporting his PhD work on the structure of reflective consciousness and
subjective awareness in humans and Als.
After lunch will be a session on Non-Reductive Machine Consciousness. There will
be three speakers: Piotr Boltuc (Co-Editor of the International Journal of Machine
Consciousness, current editor of the APA Newsletter on Philosophy and Computers),
and Kevin O'Regan (Sorbonne), followed by a panel discussion and a moderated
discussion with audience participation.
Ben Goertzel
Piotr Boltuc
Kevin O'Regan
Meaningful Media and Transformational Technologies
Traditional entertainment such as film, television, and music as well as new
entertainment forms such as computer games and virtual reality have tremendous
EFTA00810780
power to engage, educate, and transform their audience and users by creating
unique experiences. However, in the modern hyper-saturated media landscape
individuals are increasingly turning to screens and headphones as a means of
distraction and momentary escape. The fundamental question facing a growing
number of conscious content creators is how to use digital media to cultivate
greater somatic awareness and reconnect human beings with the innate wisdom
within their bodies. Those individuals who are spearheading this movement are
exploring the use of fixed and interactive media to create experiences that facilitate
inner exploration towards a deeper understanding of the self. Virtual and mixed
reality applications are proving beneficial in enabling individuals shift their
perception and overcome limiting beliefs, and new biometric technologies are
provide users with a more nuanced understanding of their physiological state in real
time. These advances when taken as a whole signal a nascent paradigmatic shift
toward meaningful media.
Sound:
Robert Alexander
Jason Asbahr
Alexander Graur
Giovanni Lion
Media:
Adrian Belic
Adam Ford
TransTech:
Jeffery Martin
Xubo Yang
Chandan Sethi
Laurent Lettree
William Chang
Lamont Tang
EFTA00810781
Entities
0 total entities mentioned
No entities found in this document
Document Metadata
- Document ID
- a643daac-3bea-41b4-919d-5d81f2bc3474
- Storage Key
- dataset_9/EFTA00810775.pdf
- Content Hash
- 85310689c615d6c9ff7807e4cde2489b
- Created
- Feb 3, 2026