Janaki Prakashan, New Delhi, ISBN: 978-98-84767-83-9, 2016, 2016
Of course, my novel “Goodbye, M.K. Gandhi” is a political satire. I had not written it to impress... more Of course, my novel “Goodbye, M.K. Gandhi” is a political satire. I had not written it to impress anyone by speaking about various issues openly. Currently, COVID-19 has taught us that there are not only health crises but also political crises. But the Governments cannot be blamed alone. We must forget our own joy and sorrow where our children’s future is concerned. What we have turned many of our politicians into a monster. In this belief it is my hope to allow the intellectual mind to Think or Rethink.
I have arrived at my home in Patna after quite a dangerous journey. There were men, women and children on their journey on foot. Many children had died on the way. There were also migrant workers stuffed in overcrowded lorries rolling in dust. But there was only one road to follow for all of them. Whether rich or poor, but there was only one hope to follow. The time has come to think or imagine. This is not something we should ever think to amuse oneself but to regret the losses already occurred on the road. I have since learnt to understand the life of the poor people of India. Undoubtedly, they are the best people in the world. Now we began to become acquainted with the heart of poor. How they might have felt without food, water, shelter, security and health?
Immigration or migration is the key to the country’s future. As COVID-19 lockdown unlocks, migrants on another journey – back to work in the novel.
"Tens of thousands of daily-wage migrant workers suddenly found themselves without jobs or a source of income when India announced a lockdown on 24 March. Overnight, the cities they had helped build and run seemed to have turned their backs on them, the trains and buses which should have carried them home suspended. So with the looming fear of hunger, men, women and children were forced to begin arduous journeys back to their villages - cycling or hitching rides on tuk-tuks, lorries, water tankers and milk vans. For many, walking was the only option. Some travelled for a few hundred kilometres, while others covered more than a thousand to go home. They weren't always alone - some had young children and others had pregnant wives, and the life they had built for themselves packed into their ragtag bags. Many never made it."
Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-52672764
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consciousness and unconsciousness processes as precursors
of self-development. Further through boundless and countless
holistic representation to reality projecting upon the worst
humanitarian crisis it offers an insight to derive the desirable
solution to it, mainly with human-environment consciousness.
turns to “metaphysical destruction” of “untrue self,” and
Derrida’s critique of the notion of “self-presence” of the
subject. In this article, I examine Beckett’s literary absurdities
to his readers’ concerns of “abuse” through them. For this
investigation Malone Dies posits a stream of conflicting
“linguistic nihilism” to the concerns of deconstructing “untrue
self,” arguably, which will reflect how abuse of Beckettian
readers is stimulated. In this context, abuse is specific forms of
emotional tensions aroused by the readers encounter with the
Beckettian intersubjectivity. In particular, the existential model
of abuse will be analysed as a part of beyond “selfdeconstruction” autonomy.
I have arrived at my home in Patna after quite a dangerous journey. There were men, women and children on their journey on foot. Many children had died on the way. There were also migrant workers stuffed in overcrowded lorries rolling in dust. But there was only one road to follow for all of them. Whether rich or poor, but there was only one hope to follow. The time has come to think or imagine. This is not something we should ever think to amuse oneself but to regret the losses already occurred on the road. I have since learnt to understand the life of the poor people of India. Undoubtedly, they are the best people in the world. Now we began to become acquainted with the heart of poor. How they might have felt without food, water, shelter, security and health?
Immigration or migration is the key to the country’s future. As COVID-19 lockdown unlocks, migrants on another journey – back to work in the novel.
"Tens of thousands of daily-wage migrant workers suddenly found themselves without jobs or a source of income when India announced a lockdown on 24 March. Overnight, the cities they had helped build and run seemed to have turned their backs on them, the trains and buses which should have carried them home suspended. So with the looming fear of hunger, men, women and children were forced to begin arduous journeys back to their villages - cycling or hitching rides on tuk-tuks, lorries, water tankers and milk vans. For many, walking was the only option. Some travelled for a few hundred kilometres, while others covered more than a thousand to go home. They weren't always alone - some had young children and others had pregnant wives, and the life they had built for themselves packed into their ragtag bags. Many never made it."
Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-52672764
Previously, I showed theoretically that consciousness might manifest itself in the behaviour of either fundamental fields or quantum particles to be consistent with clinical and behavioural neurosciences of consciousness. This direct correlation between brain metabolism and behaviour indicates that global reduction of cortical neuronal work is a defining characteristic of DOCs (disorders of consciousness) and consit may provide us a unifying neuroenergetical basis for these syndromes. In this theory, consit “binds” the activity of neurons in different brain regions into a unified state:
Name - Consit
Composition - Elementary particle
Statistics - Unidentified energy released statistics
Interactions - Consciousness
Status - Hypothetical
Symbol - Cf
Antiparticle - Self
Theorized - Year 2010
Mass - 0
Mean lifetime - Stable
Electric charge - 0 e
Spin - 2
Table 1. Information about consit
The above table states that ‘consit’ is a hypothetical elementary particle that mediates the force of consciousness in the brain. If it exists, the consit is expected to be massless (because the consciousness force appears to have unlimited range) and must be a spin-2 boson. Consciousness can be minimally sustained with energy use at only 42% of the level that occurs in healthy conscious individuals, suggesting that much cerebral metabolic activity in normal waking states does not directly contribute to consciousness. Positron emission tomography (PET) studies with [18F]-fluoro-deoxyglucose (FDG) suggest that impaired consciousness following brain injury is associated with overall brain metabolic levels of 40%–60% of normal in conditions of coma, unresponsive wakefulness syndrome (UWS), and minimally conscious state (MCS). Regardless of, relative regional variations in metabolism correlate with the preservation of specific behavioral or perceptual functions in MCS patients , supporting the claim that network activations cause local increases in energy metabolism even in disorders of consciousness (DOCs). Thus the level of tension across the neural networks determines the state of consciousness. The type and volume of traffic over those networks determines the experiences of consciousness. When we become conscious then it increases signals in our brain. The higher the frequency of the brain waves, the higher the consciousness. This unconstrained and hyper-associative quality of consciousness might show us that consciousness is interdependent on the brain waves in distinct distributed proportions, but the brain waves are not consciousness.
Objectives:
The study aims to review how conscious awareness relates to brain metabolism and how brain metabolism may change over time in brain-injured patients.
Material and methods:
For this clinical study, I reviewed on validation study of two neuroimaging-based diagnostic methods: PET imaging and functional MRI (fMRI). I conducted review of the research which included patients referred to the University Hospital of Liège, Belgium, between January, 2008, and June, 2012, who were diagnosed by with unresponsive wakefulness syndrome, locked-in syndrome, or minimally conscious state with traumatic or non-traumatic causes. The team at the hospital did repeated standardised clinical assessments with the Coma Recovery Scale–Revised (CRS–R), cerebral 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET, and fMRI during mental activation tasks. They calculated the diagnostic accuracy of both imaging methods with CRS–R diagnosis as reference. They assessed outcome after 12 months with the Glasgow Outcome Scale–Extended.
Results:
In this study, Ron Kupers, together with Johan Stender and colleagues from the University of Copenhagen in Denmark and the University of Liège in Belgium, used FDG-PET to measure resting state brain glucose metabolism in 131 DOC patients to identify objective quantitative metabolic indicators and predictors of awareness. Quantitation of images was performed by normalizing to extracerebral tissue. Patients whose glucose metabolism measured under a threshold of 42 percent of normal appeared unconscious and failed to recover consciousness within the following year. Meanwhile, patients whose glucose metabolism measured above 42 percent the threshold had signs of initial responsiveness or recovered responsiveness within a year. Overall, the test was able to accurately predict 94 percent of patients who would wake up from a vegetative state. These findings provide a simple and objective metabolic marker of consciousness, which can readily be implemented clinically.
Conclusions and perspectives:
Consciousness phenomena can be viewed as signaling models, in the sense that they involve the transmission of information or energy via some sort of particle or field (these concepts being linked in modern physics should also be linked to neuroscience of consciousness). I proposed that jointly measuring the metabolic activity and the electrophysiological complexity of cortical circuits may help us to understand how a single massless unitary spin-2 consit (Table 1) arises with dynamic balance between integrated and differentiated networks of information exchange between different regions of the brain.
References:
Stender, Johan; Mortensen, Kristian Nygaard; Thibaut, Aurore; Darkner, Sune; Laureys, Steven; Gjedde, Albert; Kupers, Ron. The minimal energetic requirement of sustained awareness after brain injury. In: Current Biology, Vol. 26, No. 11, 06.06.2016, p. 1497.
Rizvi, S. I. M. “Is consciousness a new form of energy?” Journal of Consciousness (JofC), The International Academy of Consciousness (IAC), 63 (2017). pp. 27-64. <http://jofc.org/telas/home/arquivo.php?id=jofc_63_03_en>
Stender, Johan; et al. (2016). The minimal energetic requirement of sustained awareness after brain injury. p. 1494.
Laureys, S., Owen, A.M., and Schiff, N.D. (2004). Brain function in coma, vegetative state, and related disorders. Lancet Neurol. 3, 537–546. / Stender, J., Kupers, R., Rodell, A., Thibaut, A., Chatelle, C., Bruno, M.-A., Gejl, M., Bernard, C., Hustinx, R., Laureys, S., and Gjedde, A. (2015). Quantitative rates of brain glucose metabolism distinguish minimally conscious from vegetative state patients. J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab. 35, 58–65.
Bruno, M.-A., Majerus, S., Boly, M., Vanhaudenhuyse, A., Schnakers, C., Gosseries, O., Boveroux, P., Kirsch, M., Demertzi, A., Bernard, C., et al. (2012). Functional neuroanatomy underlying the clinical subcategorization of minimally conscious state patients. J. Neurol. 259, 1087–1098. / Bruno, M.-A., Vanhaudenhuyse, A., Schnakers, C., Boly, M., Gosseries, O., Demertzi, A., Majerus, S., Moonen, G., Hustinx, R., and Laureys, S. (2010). Visual fixation in the vegetative state: an observational case series PET study. BMC Neurol. 10, 35.
Shulman, R.G., Rothman, D.L., and Hyder, F. (1999). Stimulated changes in localized cerebral energy consumption under anesthesia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 96, 3245–3250.
Ross, C. T & Shirley, F. (2009). Physical foundations of consciousness brain organisation: The role of synapses. 15 Mar 2017. p.3. <https://arxiv.org/pdf/0907.2192>.
Stender J, Gosseries O, Bruno MA, et al. Diagnostic precision of PET imaging and functional MRI in disorders of consciousness: a clinical validation study. Lancet (2014) 384:514–22.
Stender, Johan; et al. (2016). The minimal energetic requirement of sustained awareness after brain injury. p. 1496.
Ibid., 1496.
I am sharing my abstract which was selected for presentation at The Science of Consciousness Conference 2023 Taormina.
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Center for CONSCIOUSNESS STUDIES <cen...@arizona.edu>
Date: Sun, Jan 15, 2023 at 12:00 AM
Subject: TSC 2023 Taormina Conference Abstract Notification
To: ismyl...@gmail.com
Cc: Center for CONSCIOUSNESS STUDIES <cen...@arizona.edu>
Dear TSC 2023 Conference Participant (Syed Ismyl Mahmood Rizvi),
Thank you for your submission to the upcoming conference ‘The Science of Consciousness’ 2023, May 23-28 in Taormina, Sicily, Italy.
We are pleased to inform you that yours has been accepted for
Poster presentation.
The popular Poster sessions will be held Wednesday May 24 (Poster Session 1) and Friday May 26 (Poster Session 2) from 7:00 pm till 10:00 pm during Conference week. Cash bar and snacks. Guidelines for presentation will be posted on the conference website. All accepted abstracts will be published online and in the conference program book.
Please register for the conference ASAP to confirm your participation.
Registration must be completed online through the link on the Italy-based conference website.
https://tsc2023-taormina.it/
We look forward to seeing you in Taormina.
Sincerely,
TSC 2023 Conference Committee
Contact: Italy Conference Team - tsc...@bisazzagangi.it
Conference Website: https://tsc2023-taormina.it/
Sincerely,
Abi Behar Montefiore
Assistant Director; Conference Manager
Center for CONSCIOUSNESS STUDIES
University of Arizona
c/o College of Social and Behavioral Sciences
mail: Douglass 200 W., PO Box 210028, Tucson, AZ 85721-0028
cell/text: 520.247.5785
tel: 520.621.9317
cen...@arizona.edu
www.consciousness.arizona.edu
May 22 - 28, 2023 Taormina Sicily
April 21-28, 2024 Tucson Arizona
Archives
TSC The Science of Consciousness Conference Videos 1 -YouTube
TSC add'l videos 2
Join our E-list
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Center for CONSCIOUSNESS STUDIES <cen...@arizona.edu>
Date: Fri, Feb 17, 2023 at 4:41 AM
Subject: Reminder: TSC Taormina
To: ismyl...@gmail.com
Please let me know if you plan on presenting at the Conference.
Kind regards.
Abi M
Sincerely,
Abi Behar Montefiore
Assistant Director; Conference Manager
Center for CONSCIOUSNESS STUDIES - The Science of Consciousness
University of Arizona
c/o College of Social and Behavioral Sciences
mail: Douglass 200 W., PO Box 210028, Tucson, AZ 85721-0028
cell/text: 520.247.5785 - tel: 520.621.9317 - cen...@arizona.edu
www.consciousness.arizona.edu
May 22 - 28, 2023 Taormina Sicily
April 21-28, 2024 Tucson Arizona
Email - US Conference Contact: cen...@arizona.edu
Email - Taormina Conference: tsc...@bisazzagangi.it
Taormina Conference Website - https://tsc2023-taormina.it/
Abstract System https://auth.oxfordabstracts.com/?redirect=/stages/4976/submitter
Archives
TSC The Science of Consciousness Conference Videos 1 -YouTube
TSC add'l videos 2
Join our E-list
Regards,
Syed Ismyl Mahmood Rizvi
consciousness and unconsciousness processes as precursors
of self-development. Further through boundless and countless
holistic representation to reality projecting upon the worst
humanitarian crisis it offers an insight to derive the desirable
solution to it, mainly with human-environment consciousness.
turns to “metaphysical destruction” of “untrue self,” and
Derrida’s critique of the notion of “self-presence” of the
subject. In this article, I examine Beckett’s literary absurdities
to his readers’ concerns of “abuse” through them. For this
investigation Malone Dies posits a stream of conflicting
“linguistic nihilism” to the concerns of deconstructing “untrue
self,” arguably, which will reflect how abuse of Beckettian
readers is stimulated. In this context, abuse is specific forms of
emotional tensions aroused by the readers encounter with the
Beckettian intersubjectivity. In particular, the existential model
of abuse will be analysed as a part of beyond “selfdeconstruction” autonomy.
I have arrived at my home in Patna after quite a dangerous journey. There were men, women and children on their journey on foot. Many children had died on the way. There were also migrant workers stuffed in overcrowded lorries rolling in dust. But there was only one road to follow for all of them. Whether rich or poor, but there was only one hope to follow. The time has come to think or imagine. This is not something we should ever think to amuse oneself but to regret the losses already occurred on the road. I have since learnt to understand the life of the poor people of India. Undoubtedly, they are the best people in the world. Now we began to become acquainted with the heart of poor. How they might have felt without food, water, shelter, security and health?
Immigration or migration is the key to the country’s future. As COVID-19 lockdown unlocks, migrants on another journey – back to work in the novel.
"Tens of thousands of daily-wage migrant workers suddenly found themselves without jobs or a source of income when India announced a lockdown on 24 March. Overnight, the cities they had helped build and run seemed to have turned their backs on them, the trains and buses which should have carried them home suspended. So with the looming fear of hunger, men, women and children were forced to begin arduous journeys back to their villages - cycling or hitching rides on tuk-tuks, lorries, water tankers and milk vans. For many, walking was the only option. Some travelled for a few hundred kilometres, while others covered more than a thousand to go home. They weren't always alone - some had young children and others had pregnant wives, and the life they had built for themselves packed into their ragtag bags. Many never made it."
Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-52672764
Previously, I showed theoretically that consciousness might manifest itself in the behaviour of either fundamental fields or quantum particles to be consistent with clinical and behavioural neurosciences of consciousness. This direct correlation between brain metabolism and behaviour indicates that global reduction of cortical neuronal work is a defining characteristic of DOCs (disorders of consciousness) and consit may provide us a unifying neuroenergetical basis for these syndromes. In this theory, consit “binds” the activity of neurons in different brain regions into a unified state:
Name - Consit
Composition - Elementary particle
Statistics - Unidentified energy released statistics
Interactions - Consciousness
Status - Hypothetical
Symbol - Cf
Antiparticle - Self
Theorized - Year 2010
Mass - 0
Mean lifetime - Stable
Electric charge - 0 e
Spin - 2
Table 1. Information about consit
The above table states that ‘consit’ is a hypothetical elementary particle that mediates the force of consciousness in the brain. If it exists, the consit is expected to be massless (because the consciousness force appears to have unlimited range) and must be a spin-2 boson. Consciousness can be minimally sustained with energy use at only 42% of the level that occurs in healthy conscious individuals, suggesting that much cerebral metabolic activity in normal waking states does not directly contribute to consciousness. Positron emission tomography (PET) studies with [18F]-fluoro-deoxyglucose (FDG) suggest that impaired consciousness following brain injury is associated with overall brain metabolic levels of 40%–60% of normal in conditions of coma, unresponsive wakefulness syndrome (UWS), and minimally conscious state (MCS). Regardless of, relative regional variations in metabolism correlate with the preservation of specific behavioral or perceptual functions in MCS patients , supporting the claim that network activations cause local increases in energy metabolism even in disorders of consciousness (DOCs). Thus the level of tension across the neural networks determines the state of consciousness. The type and volume of traffic over those networks determines the experiences of consciousness. When we become conscious then it increases signals in our brain. The higher the frequency of the brain waves, the higher the consciousness. This unconstrained and hyper-associative quality of consciousness might show us that consciousness is interdependent on the brain waves in distinct distributed proportions, but the brain waves are not consciousness.
Objectives:
The study aims to review how conscious awareness relates to brain metabolism and how brain metabolism may change over time in brain-injured patients.
Material and methods:
For this clinical study, I reviewed on validation study of two neuroimaging-based diagnostic methods: PET imaging and functional MRI (fMRI). I conducted review of the research which included patients referred to the University Hospital of Liège, Belgium, between January, 2008, and June, 2012, who were diagnosed by with unresponsive wakefulness syndrome, locked-in syndrome, or minimally conscious state with traumatic or non-traumatic causes. The team at the hospital did repeated standardised clinical assessments with the Coma Recovery Scale–Revised (CRS–R), cerebral 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET, and fMRI during mental activation tasks. They calculated the diagnostic accuracy of both imaging methods with CRS–R diagnosis as reference. They assessed outcome after 12 months with the Glasgow Outcome Scale–Extended.
Results:
In this study, Ron Kupers, together with Johan Stender and colleagues from the University of Copenhagen in Denmark and the University of Liège in Belgium, used FDG-PET to measure resting state brain glucose metabolism in 131 DOC patients to identify objective quantitative metabolic indicators and predictors of awareness. Quantitation of images was performed by normalizing to extracerebral tissue. Patients whose glucose metabolism measured under a threshold of 42 percent of normal appeared unconscious and failed to recover consciousness within the following year. Meanwhile, patients whose glucose metabolism measured above 42 percent the threshold had signs of initial responsiveness or recovered responsiveness within a year. Overall, the test was able to accurately predict 94 percent of patients who would wake up from a vegetative state. These findings provide a simple and objective metabolic marker of consciousness, which can readily be implemented clinically.
Conclusions and perspectives:
Consciousness phenomena can be viewed as signaling models, in the sense that they involve the transmission of information or energy via some sort of particle or field (these concepts being linked in modern physics should also be linked to neuroscience of consciousness). I proposed that jointly measuring the metabolic activity and the electrophysiological complexity of cortical circuits may help us to understand how a single massless unitary spin-2 consit (Table 1) arises with dynamic balance between integrated and differentiated networks of information exchange between different regions of the brain.
References:
Stender, Johan; Mortensen, Kristian Nygaard; Thibaut, Aurore; Darkner, Sune; Laureys, Steven; Gjedde, Albert; Kupers, Ron. The minimal energetic requirement of sustained awareness after brain injury. In: Current Biology, Vol. 26, No. 11, 06.06.2016, p. 1497.
Rizvi, S. I. M. “Is consciousness a new form of energy?” Journal of Consciousness (JofC), The International Academy of Consciousness (IAC), 63 (2017). pp. 27-64. <http://jofc.org/telas/home/arquivo.php?id=jofc_63_03_en>
Stender, Johan; et al. (2016). The minimal energetic requirement of sustained awareness after brain injury. p. 1494.
Laureys, S., Owen, A.M., and Schiff, N.D. (2004). Brain function in coma, vegetative state, and related disorders. Lancet Neurol. 3, 537–546. / Stender, J., Kupers, R., Rodell, A., Thibaut, A., Chatelle, C., Bruno, M.-A., Gejl, M., Bernard, C., Hustinx, R., Laureys, S., and Gjedde, A. (2015). Quantitative rates of brain glucose metabolism distinguish minimally conscious from vegetative state patients. J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab. 35, 58–65.
Bruno, M.-A., Majerus, S., Boly, M., Vanhaudenhuyse, A., Schnakers, C., Gosseries, O., Boveroux, P., Kirsch, M., Demertzi, A., Bernard, C., et al. (2012). Functional neuroanatomy underlying the clinical subcategorization of minimally conscious state patients. J. Neurol. 259, 1087–1098. / Bruno, M.-A., Vanhaudenhuyse, A., Schnakers, C., Boly, M., Gosseries, O., Demertzi, A., Majerus, S., Moonen, G., Hustinx, R., and Laureys, S. (2010). Visual fixation in the vegetative state: an observational case series PET study. BMC Neurol. 10, 35.
Shulman, R.G., Rothman, D.L., and Hyder, F. (1999). Stimulated changes in localized cerebral energy consumption under anesthesia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 96, 3245–3250.
Ross, C. T & Shirley, F. (2009). Physical foundations of consciousness brain organisation: The role of synapses. 15 Mar 2017. p.3. <https://arxiv.org/pdf/0907.2192>.
Stender J, Gosseries O, Bruno MA, et al. Diagnostic precision of PET imaging and functional MRI in disorders of consciousness: a clinical validation study. Lancet (2014) 384:514–22.
Stender, Johan; et al. (2016). The minimal energetic requirement of sustained awareness after brain injury. p. 1496.
Ibid., 1496.
I am sharing my abstract which was selected for presentation at The Science of Consciousness Conference 2023 Taormina.
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Center for CONSCIOUSNESS STUDIES <cen...@arizona.edu>
Date: Sun, Jan 15, 2023 at 12:00 AM
Subject: TSC 2023 Taormina Conference Abstract Notification
To: ismyl...@gmail.com
Cc: Center for CONSCIOUSNESS STUDIES <cen...@arizona.edu>
Dear TSC 2023 Conference Participant (Syed Ismyl Mahmood Rizvi),
Thank you for your submission to the upcoming conference ‘The Science of Consciousness’ 2023, May 23-28 in Taormina, Sicily, Italy.
We are pleased to inform you that yours has been accepted for
Poster presentation.
The popular Poster sessions will be held Wednesday May 24 (Poster Session 1) and Friday May 26 (Poster Session 2) from 7:00 pm till 10:00 pm during Conference week. Cash bar and snacks. Guidelines for presentation will be posted on the conference website. All accepted abstracts will be published online and in the conference program book.
Please register for the conference ASAP to confirm your participation.
Registration must be completed online through the link on the Italy-based conference website.
https://tsc2023-taormina.it/
We look forward to seeing you in Taormina.
Sincerely,
TSC 2023 Conference Committee
Contact: Italy Conference Team - tsc...@bisazzagangi.it
Conference Website: https://tsc2023-taormina.it/
Sincerely,
Abi Behar Montefiore
Assistant Director; Conference Manager
Center for CONSCIOUSNESS STUDIES
University of Arizona
c/o College of Social and Behavioral Sciences
mail: Douglass 200 W., PO Box 210028, Tucson, AZ 85721-0028
cell/text: 520.247.5785
tel: 520.621.9317
cen...@arizona.edu
www.consciousness.arizona.edu
May 22 - 28, 2023 Taormina Sicily
April 21-28, 2024 Tucson Arizona
Archives
TSC The Science of Consciousness Conference Videos 1 -YouTube
TSC add'l videos 2
Join our E-list
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Center for CONSCIOUSNESS STUDIES <cen...@arizona.edu>
Date: Fri, Feb 17, 2023 at 4:41 AM
Subject: Reminder: TSC Taormina
To: ismyl...@gmail.com
Please let me know if you plan on presenting at the Conference.
Kind regards.
Abi M
Sincerely,
Abi Behar Montefiore
Assistant Director; Conference Manager
Center for CONSCIOUSNESS STUDIES - The Science of Consciousness
University of Arizona
c/o College of Social and Behavioral Sciences
mail: Douglass 200 W., PO Box 210028, Tucson, AZ 85721-0028
cell/text: 520.247.5785 - tel: 520.621.9317 - cen...@arizona.edu
www.consciousness.arizona.edu
May 22 - 28, 2023 Taormina Sicily
April 21-28, 2024 Tucson Arizona
Email - US Conference Contact: cen...@arizona.edu
Email - Taormina Conference: tsc...@bisazzagangi.it
Taormina Conference Website - https://tsc2023-taormina.it/
Abstract System https://auth.oxfordabstracts.com/?redirect=/stages/4976/submitter
Archives
TSC The Science of Consciousness Conference Videos 1 -YouTube
TSC add'l videos 2
Join our E-list
Regards,
Syed Ismyl Mahmood Rizvi