In this article, I consider the rising interest in mindfulness meditation in the West and submit it to an analysis from a Sartrean phenomenological and ontological perspective. I focus on a common form of Buddhist meditation known anapanasati, which focuses on the breath, in order to draw connections between common obstacles and experiences among meditation practitioners and Sartre's understanding of consciousness. I argue that first-person reports generally support a Sartrean view of consciousness as spontaneous, free, and intentional, but I also highlight areas where Sartre's phenomenology and ontology oversimplify the complex relationship between the pre-reflective and reflective modes of consciousness. I contend too that Sartre does not always take seriously enough the distracted, unfocused, and obsessively thought-oriented nature of consciousness.
机构:
Attent Memory & Cognit Ctr, Destin, FL 32541 USA
Emory Univ, Amer Acad Child & Adolescent Psychiat, Comm Integrat Med, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA
Emory Univ, Sch Med, Atlanta, GA 30322 USAAttent Memory & Cognit Ctr, Destin, FL 32541 USA
Simkin, Deborah R.
Black, Nancy B.
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机构:
Emory Univ, Amer Acad Child & Adolescent Psychiat, Comm Integrat Med, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA
Walter Reed Natl Mil Med Ctr, Natl Capital Consortium, Bethesda, MD 20889 USAAttent Memory & Cognit Ctr, Destin, FL 32541 USA
机构:
Liverpool John Moores Univ, Sch Psychol, Liverpool L3 2ET, Merseyside, EnglandLiverpool John Moores Univ, Sch Psychol, Liverpool L3 2ET, Merseyside, England