Mindfulness meditation has both positive and negative effects on moral functioning, distributed across multiple dimensions of moral cognition and behavior. A multifactor construct that assesses outcomes across several aspects of morality reveals that contemplative practices do not uniformly improve morality; instead, they produce a mix of beneficial and detrimental influences on different moral actions. The study provides an empirically rigorous investigation into the impact of mindfulness on morality, showing that the effects are complex and not captured by unidimensional measures.
Deep meditative deconstruction, particularly the Buddhist defabrication process and its associated phenomenology, can be understood through the active inference framework (AIF). Buddhist defabrication is a deconstructive process that drives inference ever lower in an agent's hierarchical generative model by repeatedly releasing mental tensing linked to clinging and aversion. This release corresponds to a hierarchical level-specific reduction in belief precision, allowing Buddhist concepts like equanimity and meditative stillness to be interpreted under AIF. The deconstruction process culminates in a cessation of phenomenal experience, and the states traversed may inform understanding of core-knowledge structuring and the generation of experience.
AI systems can now engage with nondualist philosophical concepts and simulate Zen teaching methods with remarkable sophistication. However, this technological facility may produce only simulated understanding, where nondualist principles are applied without the dissolution of subject-object boundaries that contemplative traditions consider essential for genuine insight. Arguments for AI's utility highlight its potential as a philosophical partner that democratizes access to esoteric domains, while arguments against emphasize that easy access may undermine the existential friction and struggle contemplative traditions deem necessary for authentic realization. This tension between technological facilitation and contemplative transformation requires systematic empirical investigation to determine how AI might appropriately support nondualistic understanding without compromising its trans-discursive essence.