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Issues and Perspectives in Meditation Research: In Search for a Definition

Bhuvanesh Awasthi

Frontiers in Psychology January 1, 2013 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00613 via OpenAlex

Summary

The study discusses the importance of incorporating philosophical aspects into the understanding of meditation alongside its neurobiological correlates. It emphasizes that a comprehensive neuroscience of meditation requires an operational definition that includes both traditional ontological descriptions and modern neurocognitive accounts. Addressing these definitions and their implications is crucial for advancing the field and improving meditation-based interventions.

Study at a glance

Key finding A satisfactory neuroscience of meditation necessitates an inclusive operational definition that integrates traditional and modern perspectives.

Abstract

Despite the growing interest in the neurobiological correlates of meditation, most research has omitted to take into account the underlying philosophical aspects of meditation and its wider implications. This, in turn, is reflected in issues surrounding definition, study design, and outcomes. Here, I highlight the often ignored but important aspect of definition in the existing scholarship on neuroscience and meditation practice. For a satisfactory account of a neuroscience of meditation, we must aim to retrieve an operational definition that is inclusive of a traditional ontological description as well as the modern neurocognitive account of the phenomena. Moving beyond examining the effects of meditation practice, to take a potential step forward in the direction to establish how meditation works, it becomes crucial to appraise the philosophical positions that underlie the phenomenology of meditation in the originating traditions. This endeavor may challenge our intuitions and concepts in either directions, but issues pertaining to definition, design, and validity of response measures are extremely important for the evolution of the field and will provide a much-needed context and framework for meditation based interventions.

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