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January 2026

Buddhism

What January 2026's 9 new studies found, synthesized from the papers below. All Buddhism research →

The synthesis

Synthesized from 9 studies in the library · AI-generated, grounded in the abstracts below

Found by searching the library for Buddhism, buddhist, contemplative science, dharma, then ranked by relevance.

Research on Buddhism in January 2026 focused on theoretical and philosophical analyses of meditation, cognition, and ethics, rather than empirical outcomes. Studies examined the cognitive theory in early Buddhist texts, the relationship between language and cognition, and the ethical integration of mindfulness in oncology, but provided no quantitative data on effects. The evidence is entirely conceptual and qualitative, precluding any empirical conclusion about the direction or magnitude of effects.

Confidence in the evidence

Insufficient
  • All nine studies are theoretical, philosophical, or qualitative reviews with no empirical data or sample sizes.
  • No studies report quantitative outcomes, effect sizes, or controlled comparisons.
  • The research addresses conceptual frameworks, historical analysis, and ethical recommendations, not testable hypotheses.
How we rate confidence

Confidence reflects the strength of the underlying evidence, not whether the result is favorable. It weighs the number and size of studies, their design (randomized trials count for more than observational or single-case work), how consistently they point the same way, and their risk of bias.

Tiers run from Insufficient to High. High is rare in this field: small, early, or open-label studies land lower even when their direction is encouraging.

Evidence by study

Direction is each study's finding relative to your question: Supports, Opposes, No effect, Mixed, or Unclear.

This study reconsiders the relationship between guided meditation and tantric ritual in Śāntideva's Bodhicaryāvatāra, arguing that his work contains double entendres and critiques of transgressive yogas.

theoretical

This article examines early Buddhist cognitive theory through a psychosemiotic framework, arguing that cognition is a stratified process and that contemplative practice can intervene in habitual semiosis.

theoretical

This paper provides an overview of the relationship between language and cognition in Pāli Buddhist texts, engaging with linguistics and semiotics to understand the role of signs in cognitive processes.

theoretical

This study develops a novel Daoist meditation method called 'Merging Oblivion Meditation' by integrating Inner Observation and Sitting in Oblivion, aiming to facilitate nondual awareness through guided imagination.

theoretical

This paper examines ethical implications of using Buddhist-informed mindfulness in oncology, proposing modifications to ensure practitioners are knowledgeable about Buddhist philosophy and transparent about its origins.

theoretical

This study shows that prompting AI to reflect on contemplative principles (mindfulness, emptiness, non-duality, boundless care) improves performance on the AILuminate Benchmark and cooperation in the Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma.

theoretical

This multidimensional review examines the role of chanting and prayer in Buddhism, highlighting their functions in transmitting doctrine, cultivating virtues, regulating mental states, and constructing communities.

theoretical

This entry explores the mutual influences between Buddhism and Western psychology, discussing historical context, controversies in incorporating Buddhism into empirical frameworks, and future research trajectories.

theoretical

This comparative philosophical study examines Nirvana in Theravada, Mahayana, and Vajrayana Buddhism, finding consistent association with cessation of craving and ignorance but differing interpretations across traditions.

theoretical

Points of agreement

  • Multiple studies emphasize the importance of understanding Buddhist concepts (e.g., emptiness, non-self, mindfulness) within their original philosophical and historical contexts.
  • Several papers highlight the role of language, signs, and semiosis in Buddhist cognitive theory and meditation.
  • There is agreement that Buddhist practices have potential applications in modern contexts (e.g., psychology, AI alignment, oncology) but require careful adaptation.

Conflicts

  • No empirical conflicts are present as all studies are theoretical or qualitative; however, the study on Merging Oblivion Meditation (31069) explicitly distinguishes its Daoist-derived method from Buddhist-derived practices in process and psychological effects.

Gaps

  • No empirical studies with quantitative outcomes, sample sizes, or controlled designs are provided.
  • Durability, blinding, population-specific effects, and dose-response relationships are not addressed.
  • The practical efficacy of proposed interventions (e.g., Merging Oblivion Meditation, contemplative AI alignment) remains untested in human subjects.
Browse these studies in the library