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Training the Mind and Transforming Your World: Moral Phenomenology in the Tibetan Buddhist Lojong Tradition

Jessica Locke

Comparative and Continental Philosophy September 2, 2018 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1080/17570638.2018.1531468 via Semantic Scholar

Summary

Buddhist ethics as moral phenomenology requires transforming the deep structures of experience, not just changing overt behavior. The Tibetan lojong (Mind Training) tradition aims to accomplish this ambitious ethical project by using meditation and contemplation to disrupt habitual affective responses and replace them with radically compassionate altruism. This practice cultivates bodhicitta (awakening mind) and ultimately transforms the phenomenological structures underlying both ethical action and conscious experience, fulfilling the goal of moral phenomenology.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding The Tibetan lojong tradition exemplifies how Buddhist moral phenomenology can transform the phenomenological structures that condition ethical experience and action.

Abstract

ABSTRACT This article analyzes the moral-psychological stakes of Jay Garfield's reading of Buddhist ethics as moral phenomenology and applies that thesis to the pedagogical mechanisms of the Tibetan Buddhist lojong (“Mind Training”) tradition. I argue that moral phenomenology requires that the practitioner work on a part of her subjectivity not ordinarily accessible to agential action: the phenomenological structures that condition experience. This makes moral phenomenology a highly ambitious ethical project. I turn to lojong as an example of a Buddhist practice that claims to accomplish this ambitious task. As a training toward the ethical ideal of bodhicitta (“awakening mind”), lojong utilizes practices of meditation and contemplation to disrupt the habitual, affective responses that arise from the conventional phenomenological orientation to the world, replacing them with imagined responses of radically compassionate altruism. This ultimately inculcates a transformation of the phenomenological structures that underlie both ethical action and conscious experience, fulfilling the aim of moral phenomenology.

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