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tanmlamaya

Tanmlamaya is a term used in contemporary philosophy of mind and spiritual discourse to describe a layered model of reality in which surface appearances (maya) arise from an underlying substrate called tanm. The term is not widely standardized and appears most often in speculative essays and new-age publications that seek to synthesize cognitive science with traditional metaphysical ideas.

Etymology and usage: The word blends tanm with maya, drawing on Sanskrit-inspired vocabulary while remaining a

Conceptual framework: Proponents describe tanmlamaya as comprising several strata: a physical substrate; a phenomenological layer in

Relation to existing ideas: The term is often presented as a synthesis of the kosha or sheaths,

Reception and critique: Critics view tanmlamaya as a metaphor rather than a testable theory, cautioning that

See also: maya; perception; philosophy of mind; kosha.

modern
neologism.
Tanm
is
commonly
interpreted
as
an
embodied
or
tactile
layer—an
index
of
sensory
and
motor
processes—while
maya
denotes
illusion
or
misperception
in
many
classical
traditions.
which
perception
is
shaped
by
attention,
emotion,
and
expectation;
and
a
cultural-interpretive
layer
where
language
and
symbols
add
meaning.
The
model
emphasizes
that
what
we
take
to
be
reality
is
generated
by
interactions
across
these
levels.
and
the
Buddhist/Advaita
notions
of
perception,
but
it
remains
distinct
in
its
emphasis
on
tanm
as
an
active
substrate
rather
than
a
mere
epistemic
veil.
it
risks
overcomplicating
perceptual
explanation
and
blurring
lines
between
ontology
and
epistemology.