Skip to content

Energy healers: who they are and what they do.

Jeff Levin

Explore (New York, N.Y.) January 1, 2011 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1016/j.explore.2010.10.005 via PubMed

Summary

This paper provides a conceptual overview and taxonomy of energy healing, categorizing practices into four traditions: East Asian, Western professional, bioenergy, and contemporary metaphysical. It explores core concepts such as the source and transmission of healing, the healer's role and state of consciousness, and client requirements. The relative importance of technique is discussed, with emphasis on focus, intention, and compassion as key factors. The paper concludes that formal training is not necessary for effective energy healing.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding Focus, intention, and compassion are what really matter for healing, and formally trained energy practitioners do not have a monopoly on energy healing.

Abstract

This paper surveys the landscape of energy healing, offering a taxonomy and conceptual overview of the work of practitioners. First, systems of energy healing are classified under four categories: an East Asian tradition, a Western professional tradition, a bioenergy tradition, and a contemporary metaphysical tradition. Examples of each are provided. Second, the possibility of core concepts in energy healing is broached, focusing specifically on five issues: the source of healing and its pathway of transmission, what it is that is being transmitted, what it is that healers do, the healer's state of consciousness, and requirements of clients in order to receive healing. Third, a discussion is provided of the relative importance of technique in energy healing. Fourth, what really matters for healing is proposed, emphasizing three factors: focus, intention, and compassion. Finally, the paper concludes by suggesting that formally trained energy practitioners do not have a monopoly on energy healing.

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment