Bodymind (in meditation traditions)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Bodymind is a compound of body and mind and may be used differently in different meditation traditions. These different understandings often inform each other. The Buddhist philosopher, Herbert V. Günther, has stated:

What we call 'body' and 'mind' are mere abstractions from an identity experience that cannot be reduced to the one or the other abstraction, nor can it be hypostatized into some sort of thing without falsifying its very being.[1]

Modern Western cultures inherited the concept of

New Age movement
.

Vajrayana and Zen Buddhism

In

heartmind and Yogachara's mindstream. Within these traditions, Bodymind is held as a continuüm
and field phenomenon. Arpaia and Rapgay discuss the connection of mindbody in the eighth chapter of their book, Tibetan Wisdom for Modern Life , entitled "Health: strengthening the mind-body connection".

David E. Shaner, PhD, coined the compound term "bodymind" in his thesis work at the University of Hawai'i, "The Bodymind Experience in Japanese Buddhism", which he defended in 1979 and published in 1985.[2] Shaner translated the term 心身統一合氣道, Shinshintouitsu Aikidō.[2]

See also

  • Bodymind (in new age)
  • Mind-body dichotomy

Notes

  1. ^ Mipham 1973, pp. 15–16
  2. ^ "The Bodymind Experience in Japanese Buddhism". www.sunypress.edu. Retrieved 2020-05-14.

References