“...concepts have three fundamental properties—contextuality, intentionality, and abstraction—which independent things do not. To produce a mental world from the physical world, the physical world must first explain how contextuality, intentionality, and abstraction can arise.”
Ashish Dalela“...every physicist knows that the laws of physics can be used to build a gun or a bicycle; physics does not dictate a specific use for its laws. To that extent, it should be obvious that the laws of physics are incomplete in predicting everything that occurs in nature—from Moral Materialism”
Ashish Dalela“Matter is a medium of communication between minds, and everything that exists in the mind can also exist in the body. Furthermore, the body—being the expression of a mental state is developed as a manifestation of the mind.”
Ashish Dalela, Six Causes: The Vedic Theory of Creation“...quantum problems unseat many classical ideas about matter, causality, and change that biologists use, and that disruption in turn entails radical revisions to the ideas about the mechanism in evolution, in ways we don't yet acknowledge.”
Ashish Dalela, Signs of Life: A Semantic Critique of Evolutionary Theory“...concepts have three fundamental properties—contextuality, intentionality, and abstraction—which independent things do not. To produce a mental world from the physical world, the physical world must first explain how contextuality, intentionality, and abstraction can arise.”
Ashish Dalela, Uncommon Wisdom: Fault Lines in the Foundations of Atheism“...there is much more to matter than modern science currently would like to acknowledge. By developing insights about the observer, we can describe matter in a new way.”
Ashish Dalela, Sankhya and Science: Applications of Vedic Philosophy to Modern Science