See your post 1146 for the source of my choice of words.
I don't know there is a word for that, or that we need one.
I need one. How about the "sensorious mind"?
And, while I'm asking, what is the commonly accepted term for the mind with both sensations and concepts?
'Commonly accepted?' Don't know there is one. Don't know that anybody has ever thought about it before now.
How about the "conceiving mind"?
That is the problem with being out on the edge, there aren't any maps to follow. You have to make your own.
Ooo. Hope I don't cut myself.
From your post 1278 to betty boop: Take your time, I'm trying to cut down anyway. I love FreeRepublic, this is one of the best sites on the web. But it takes too much of my time. Even if I'm not writing I'm thinking about what I'm going to write. I need to spend more time on other things.
Ditto. I'm trying to pace my posts, and go one tiny step at a time so that I don't get obsessed. I hope this suits you and we can continue the dialog.
Yes, gets rather addictive, doesn't it? And yes again, the smaller the posts the easier it is to follow the argument, not get lost running all over.
Ok, for the sake of argument, we will accept your definitions. I'm not sure we can define a knife 'edge' demarcation between the separate definitions of what is taking place in a single mind, since we are describing a process not an object, but that isn't really a worry until it comes up.
You may not cut yourself, but you may fall over.