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Phenomenological Reflections on Mindfulness the Buddhist Tradition
Phenomenological Reflections on Mindfulness the Buddhist Tradition

Phenomenological Reflections on Mindfulness the Buddhist Tradition

Current price: $170.00
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Size: Hardcover

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Beginning with descriptions of how mindfulness is encountered in everyday, pre-philosophical life, the book moves on to an analysis of how the Pali Nikāyas of Theravada Buddhism define mindfulness and the practice of cultivating it. It then offers a critique of the contemporary attempts to explain mindfulness as a kind of attention. The author argues that mindfulness is not attention, nor can it be understood as a mere modification of the attentive process. Rather, becoming mindful involves a radical shift in perspective. According to the author’s account, being mindful is the feeling of being tuned-in to the open horizon, which is contrasted with Edmund Husserl’s transcendental horizon. The book also elucidates the difference between the practice of cultivating mindfulness with the practice of the phenomenological , which reveals new possibilities for the practice of phenomenology itself. will appeal to scholars and advanced students interested in phenomenology, Buddhist philosophy, and comparative philosophy.
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