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Mindstream
Mindstream (''citta-santāna'') in Buddhist philosophy is the moment-to-moment continuum (Sanskrit: ''saṃtāna'') of awareness which provides a continuity from one life to another. The concept developed in later Yogacara, to avoid reification of the ''ālaya-vijñāna''. ==Definition== ' (Sanskrit), literally "the stream of mind",〔Keown, Damien (ed.) with Hodge, Stephen; Jones, Charles; Tinti, Paola (2003). ''A Dictionary of Buddhism''. Great Britain, Oxford: Oxford University Press. P.62. ISBN 0-19-860560-9〕 is the stream of succeeding moments of mind or awareness. It provides a continuity of the personality in the absence of a permanently abiding "self" (ātman), which Buddhism denies. The mindstream provides a continuity from one life to another, akin to the flame of a candle which may be passed from one candle to another: According to Waldron, The vāsanās (karmic imprints) provide the karmic continuity between lives and between moments.〔Lusthaus, Dan (2002). ''Buddhist Phenomenology: A Philosophical Investigation of Yogācāra Buddhism and the Ch'eng Wei-shih Lun''. Routledge. ISBN 0-7007-1186-4. Source: () (accessed: 13 January 2009) p.472〕 According to Lusthaus, these ''vasanas'' determine how one
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