The meeting of meditative disciplines and Western psychology: a mutually enriching dialogue

Am Psychol. 2006 Apr;61(3):227-39. doi: 10.1037/0003-066X.61.3.227.

Abstract

Meditation is now one of the most enduring, widespread, and researched of all psychotherapeutic methods. However, to date the meeting of the meditative disciplines and Western psychology has been marred by significant misunderstandings and by an assimilative integration in which much of the richness and uniqueness of meditation and its psychologies and philosophies have been overlooked. Also overlooked have been their major implications for an understanding of such central psychological issues as cognition and attention, mental training and development, health and pathology, and psychological capacities and potentials. Investigating meditative traditions with greater cultural and conceptual sensitivity opens the possibility of a mutual enrichment of both the meditative traditions and Western psychology, with far-reaching benefits for both.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Meditation / methods*
  • Meditation / psychology
  • Psychology / methods*
  • Western World*