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F. Edelhäuser

2 papers in the library · 21 citations · publishing 2018-2024

Papers

Outer and Inner Dimensions of Brain and Consciousness - Refining and Integrating the Phenomenal Layers

Advances in Cognitive Psychology December 1, 2018 Johannes Wagemann, F. Edelhäuser, Ulrich W. Weger 18 citations

The mind–brain problem remains unresolved. By examining neurophilosophical and neuropsychological positions, the problem can be reframed as a structural relation between methodological and content-related aspects, which highlights the need for a new balance between separating and integrating elements. As an alternative, Rudolf Steiner's approach is investigated, which includes a first-person method and the mirror metaphor—the brain as necessary but not sufficient for mental activity. A first-person study using volitionally controlled perceptual reversals reveals a phenomenological distinction between engaging and disengaging forms of mental activity. This initiates discussion of related philosophical concepts and outlines next research steps.

Meditation Hindrances and Breakthroughs: A Multilevel First-Person Phenomenological Analysis

Religions July 18, 2024 T. Sparby, Philip Eilinghoff-Ehlers, Nuri Lewandovski et al. 3 citations

Meditation hindrances—phenomena that counteract meditation—can also become grounds for breakthroughs. In a six-day retreat with five participants, a multilevel phenomenological method (biographical exploration, daily notetaking, and micro-phenomenology) revealed that negative effects, often called challenging or adverse, may dissolve into positive outcomes. The concept of hindrances is developed, showing how difficulties can be part of a process leading to breakthroughs.