Description
A dizzying array of meditation practices have emerged in the long and culturally diverse history of Buddhism. Yet if you are seeking out meditation today in North America and Europe-and, increasingly, in the rest of the world as well-you will likely encounter one particular type, often under the label "mindfulness." You will find it taught in Zen monasteries, Insight Meditation centers, health clubs, colleges, psychologists' offices, corporations, liberal Christian churches, prisons, and the US military. Countless articles in popular magazines promote its benefits, often depicting it as a panacea for problems as wide-ranging as anxiety, depression, heart disease, eating disorders, and psoriasis. There are books on mindfulness and meditation not only by Buddhist monks but also by medical doctors, psychologists, computer engineers, business consultants, and a US congressman.Meditation teachers will sometimes say that this is the same meditative practice that the Buddha taught over 2500 years ago, and which has been transmitted virtually unchanged down through the centuries to us today. The "cultural baggage" surrounding the practices has changed, but the essence is intact, and what it does for people, whether you're a Buddhist monk or a corporate executive, remains the same.Rethinking Meditation shows that the standard articulation of mindfulness did not come down to us unchanged from the time of the Buddha. Rather, it is a distillation of particular strands of Buddhist thought that have combined with western ideas to create a unique practice tailored to modern life. Rethinking Meditation argues that the relationship between meditative practices and cultural context is much more crucial than is suggested in typical contemporary articulations.David McMahan shows that most of the vast array of meditative practices that have emerged in Buddhist traditions have been filtered out of typical contemporary practice, allowing only a trickle of meditative practices through. This book presents a genealogy of some specific elements in classical Buddhist traditions that have fed into contemporary meditative practices-those that have made it through the filters of modernity. It asks: out of the many forms of Buddhist meditation that have developed over two-and-a-half millennia, how and why were particular practices selected to coalesce into the Standard Version today?
Table of Contents
I. Thinking about Meditation1. Introduction2. Neural Maps and Enlightenment Machines3. What Difference Does Context Make?: Meditation and Social ImaginariesII. Meditation in Context4. Meditation in the Pali Social Imaginary I: The Phenomenology and Ethics of Monastic Mindfulness5. Meditation in the Pali Social Imaginary II: Corporeal and Cognitive Mindfulness6. Meditation and Cultural Repertoires7. Deconstructive Meditation and the Search for the Buddha WithinIII. Meditation and the Ethical Subject8. Secularism and the Ethic of Appreciation9. Meditation and the Ethic of Authenticity10. Meditation and the Ethic of Autonomy11. Affordances, Disruption, and Activism12. Individualism and Fragmentation in the Mirrors of Secularism: the Ethic of InterdependencePostscript: The Iron Age and the Anthropocene



