Skip to content

Meditation in the Pali Social Imaginary I

David L. Mcmahan

Rethinking Meditation September 14, 2023 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780197661741.003.0004

Summary

The chapter discusses how early Buddhist meditation literature, particularly the Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta, interacts with phenomenology and cognitive science to differentiate between conscious efforts and habitual activities influenced by cultural contexts. It highlights that certain meditation practices aim to make tacit experiences explicit, helping Buddhist monastics cultivate specific ways of being and fostering awareness of their habitual experiences. This process involves training desires and sensibilities to create an alternative way of living.

Study at a glance

Population Buddhist monastics
Key finding Meditation practices are designed to disrupt habitual experiences and foster explicit awareness, helping monastics cultivate particular ways of being.

Abstract

Abstract This chapter brings early Buddhist meditation literature—especially the Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta—into conversation with ideas in phenomenology and cognitive science that address the distinction between conscious, effortful activity and habitual activity rooted in the tacit assumptions, dispositions, and categories of a particular cultural context. Some meditation practices disrupt the tacit level of experience in order to bring it to explicit cognition and intentional direction. Part of their original purpose was to help consciously cultivate particular ways of being in the world for Buddhist monastics and to habituate them to the categories, orientations, and sensibilities recommended for monastic life, fostering explicit awareness of the habitual flow of experience and activity in order to reconfigure this activity and reinterpret its significance. Meditation in this sense entails training desires, aesthetic sensibilities, and categories through which to interpret one’s experience, creating an alternative habitus—a habitual, embodied way of being in the world.

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment