Skip to content

Classical mindfulness: an introduction to its theory and practice for clinical application.

Lobsang Rapgay, Alexander Bystrisky

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences August 1, 2009 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2009.04405.x via PubMed

Summary

Mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) has been central to bringing mindfulness into psychology and medicine, leading to secular adaptations and several mindfulness measures. However, scrutiny has grown beyond initial positive efficacy studies, raising questions about the lack of an operational definition of mindfulness and little evidence for its mechanisms in treating psychopathology and medical conditions. Issues include the interchangeable use of attention and awareness in modern descriptions, whereas traditional Buddhist psychology distinguishes attention as a changing factor of consciousness and awareness as a stable state.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding Modern mindfulness lacks an operational definition and clear differentiation between attention and awareness, contrasting with traditional Buddhist psychology.

Abstract

Among the modern versions of mindfulness, mindfulness based stress reduction (MBSR) has played the key role in introducing mindfulness practice to the field of psychology and medicine. In fact, the efforts to integrate mindfulness into psychology have resulted in further adaptation of MBSR into more secular and psychological forms as well as the creation of a number of mindfulness measures such as the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale, the Freiburg Mindfulness Inventory, the Kentucky Inventory of Mindfulness Skills, and the Cognitive and Affective Mindfulness Scale. At the same time there is increasing scrutiny of mindfulness that goes beyond the initial positive efficacy studies resulting in several important questions being raised. These range from the absence of an operational definition of mindfulness as well as little evidence for the mechanisms of mindfulness that account for outcome changes for various psychopathology and medical conditions. Questions about the defining characteristics of mindfulness are also being raised such as the lack of differentiation between the features called attention and awareness and the interchangeable use of the two terms in modern descriptions of mindfulness. Such questions resonate with traditional practitioners of Buddhist contemplative psychology for whom attention signifies an every-changing factor of consciousness, while awareness refers to a stable and specific state of consciousness.

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment