An Ethical Samādhi: Brahma-vihāra Meditation and the Flexible Early Buddhist Path
Mindfulness May 20, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1007/s12671-025-02597-6 via OpenAlex
Summary
Brahma-vihāra meditation (BVM) in early Buddhism serves to enhance ethical practice and develop a comprehensive meditative state. It is positioned as a flexible method that can be adapted by practitioners according to their personal inclinations. BVM contributes to ethical perfection through the attitudes of love, compassion, empathic joy, and equanimity, while also functioning as a form of samādhi that can replace traditional meditative concentration methods. This interpretation highlights the interconnectedness of ethics and meditation on the path to liberation.
Study at a glance
| Key finding | Brahma-vihāra meditations play a dual role in enhancing ethical practice and serving as a form of samādhi that can lead to liberation. |
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Abstract
Abstract This article offers a new interpretation of Brahma-vihāra meditation (BVM) in early Buddhism, positioning it between ethical cultivation and development of samādhi ; BVM can thereby perfect ethical practice by creating a comprehensive meditative state that is thoroughly ethical. The fact that the radically ethical states of mind of BVM are sometimes included in the path to liberation, while more commonly they are not, further affords an important understanding regarding the flexible nature of the early Buddhist path. This is not one path, two paths, or any other number of paths, but a flexible method that different practitioners can use in various ways, evoking its diverse potentials according to their personal inclinations and contexts. Within this dynamic structure, Brahma-vihāra meditations play two main roles: first, they allow a completion of ethical practice, bringing it to perfection through the divine attitudes of love ( mettā ), compassion ( karuṇā ), empathic joy ( muditā ), and equanimity ( upekkhā ). Second, these states of mind, in which the mind reaches a state of totality, serve as a form of samādhi , which can replace other types of meditative concentration, such as jhāna . At their best, these states can be liberating. This interpretation of BVM’s role improves our understanding of the early Buddhist path, and specifically of the manner in which it combines ethical cultivation with advanced meditation. Here, samādhi proves to be ethical, and ethics liberating.