From Abstract Concepts to Experiential Knowledge: Embodying Enlightenment in a Meditation Center
Qualitative Sociology
Short Title:
From Abstract Concepts to Experiential Knowledge
Format:
Journal Article
Publication Year:
n.d.
Pages:
469-489
Sources ID:
21800
Visibility:
Private
Zotero Collections:
Philosophical Context, Contemplation by Tradition, Buddhist Contemplation
Abstract:
(Show)
How do abstract philosophies turn into lived reality? Based on 2 years of ethnographic observations and in-depth interviews of vipassana meditation practitioners in Israel and the United States, the paper follows the process through which meditators embody the three main Buddhist tenets: dissatisfaction, impermanence and not-self. While meditators consider these tenets central to Buddhist philosophy, it is only through the practice of meditation that the tenets are experienced on the bodily level and thereby are “realized” as truth. This realization takes place in the situated environment of the meditation center, where participation in long meditation retreats facilitates the production of specific subjective experiences that infuse the knowledge of Buddhist tenets with embodied meaning. The paper illustrates how abstract concepts and embodied experience support one another in the construction of meditators’ phenomenological reality and suggests a general framework for studying the variety of relations that exist between the conceptual and embodied dimensions of different types of knowledge.
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