Attention as a means of self‐dissolution and reformation

Ratio 31 (4):376-388 (2018)
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Abstract

Buddhist ethics generally favour attention over action, and mental cultivation as the means of ethical transformation. Buddhaghosa’s treatment of samādhi – meditation – in the Path of Purification (Visuddhimagga) exemplifies this view that practices of attention are morally transforming. His detailed discussion of which forms of attentional exercises are transformative to whom reveal that edifying attention is directed to impersonal reality rather than persons – even when the Buddha is our object of attention. In successful meditation, we do not just recognise reality and ourselves as devoid of essence; we experience it as such – and in the experiencing, become so ourselves.

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Amber D. Carpenter
Yale-NUS College

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