Skip to content

Individualism in Spirituality? A Close Look at Vedanta Students and Yoga Practitioners in Rio de Janeiro

Cecilia Guimarães Bastos

International Journal of Latin American Religions December 1, 2022 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1007/s41603-022-00176-4 via Springer Nature

Summary

The article discusses how yoga and meditation practices among Vedanta students reveal a tension between individualism and spirituality. It finds that participants often adhere to religious dogmas and authority figures, such as gurus, while also experiencing a sense of transcendence beyond their individuality within these holistic traditions. This duality challenges the notions of autonomy and free choice in spiritual practices.

Study at a glance

Population Vedanta students and yoga practitioners
Key finding Participants tend to submit to religious authorities while also transcending their individuality through holistic traditions.

Abstract

The practices of yoga and meditation are discussed based on the observation of a group of Vedanta students and yoga practitioners. This article offers a critical reflection of the individualism inherent to the understanding of spirituality. In contrast to most studies that differentiate spirituality from religion, this research confirms that interlocutors tend to submit to religious dogmas and to authorities, in the form of the guru, the tradition and the cosmic order. It was noticed that they adapt to these principles, at the same time that they seem to transcend their individuality when becoming part of these holistic traditions, both as transmitters and receivers, who thus express their most significant values and meanings. These as a result challenge the concepts of autonomy and free choice.

Tags

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment