Loving Attention: Buddhaghosa, Katsuki Sekida, and Iris Murdoch on Meditation and Moral Development
Philosophy East and West August 1, 2023 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1353/pew.2024.a904093
Summary
Iris Murdoch argued that a just and loving attention is central to moral capacity. She explored whether Zen Buddhist zazen meditation could strengthen this capacity, expressing both optimism and reservations. This paper argues that Murdoch's project would have been stronger if she had instead considered Buddhaghosa's Theravāda Buddhist instructions for meditating on loving-kindness, compassion, gladness, and equanimity.
Study at a glance
| Design | theoretical or philosophical paper |
|---|---|
| Key finding | Murdoch's project for strengthening moral attention through meditation would have been stronger if she had considered Buddhaghosa's instructions for loving-kindness, compassion, gladness, and equanimity. |
Abstract
According to Iris Murdoch, one of our central moral capacities is the capacity to direct our attention in a way that is just and loving. In Metaphysics as a Guide to Morals , Murdoch explores the prospects for strengthening this capacity through engaging in Zen Buddhist practices, particularly zazen meditation as Katsuki Sekida describes it in Zen Training: Methods and Philosophy . Murdoch has a mixed view of whether zazen could really contribute to our moral development, expressing both some optimism and some reservations. I argue that a stronger version of Murdoch’s project, by her own lights, would have looked to the Theravāda Buddhist philosopher Buddhaghosa’s instructions for taking up loving-kindness, compassion, gladness, and equanimity as meditation subjects.