Publication | Open Access
Buddhist Modernism and the Rhetoric of Meditative Experience
385
Citations
23
References
1995
Year
Literary HistoryHumanitiesExistentialismMeditative PracticeBuddhist ModernismPhenomenologyMeditationSpiritual PracticesBuddhismSpiritualityBuddhist Monastic PracticeReligious SystemsLived ExperienceLanguage StudiesBuddhist StudiesChristian MysticismBuddhist Technical TermsContemplative Science
Abstract The category “experience” has played a cardinal role in modern studies of buddhism. Few scholars seem to question the notion that Buddhist monastic practice, particularly meditation, is intended first and foremost to inculcate specific religious or “mystical” experiences in the minds of practitioners. Accordingly, a wide variety of Buddhist technical terms pertaining to the “stages on the path” are subject to a phenomenological hermeneutic—they are interpreted as if they designated discrete “states of consciousness” experienced by historical individuals in the course of their meditative practice.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1