From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Buddhism and psychology overlap in theory and
in practice. Over the last century, three strands of interplay have
evolved:
- Descriptive phenomenology: Western and Buddhist scholars
have found in Buddhist teachings a detailed introspective phenomenological psychology
(particularly in the Abhidhamma).
- Psychotherapeutic meaning: Humanistic psychotherapists have found in
Buddhism's non-dualistic approach and enlightenment experiences (such as in Zen kensho) the potential for
transformation, healing and finding existential meaning.
- Clinical utility: Contemporary mental-health
practitioners increasingly find ancient Buddhist practices (such as
the development of mindfulness) of empirically proven
therapeutic value.
Mindstream
Psychology is the
study of the Psyche often rendered in English as
mind. The principal and central
teaching of Buddha Dharma is the 'consciousness continuum' or the
Mindstream. As Mañjuśrīmitra states in Verse 62 of the
Bodhicittabhavana, a seminal early text of Ati Yoga,
here rendered into English by Kunpal Tulku (1995: unpaginated):
Yet no phenomena exists for either ordinary people or for
enlightened Saints other than the continuum (santana) of their own
mind (citta).[1]
In human experience, a particular station of sentient beings, all phenomena or dharmas
are mediated through and by the mind[stream]. Importantly, mind as
embodied in the cartesian dualism
of mind and body does not exist in the Buddha Dharma and
instead is replaced with the mindstream which may be conveyed in a
traditional metaphorical relationship where the mindstream is the
flame of the candle of the skandha: where in exegetical commentary, the
flame never touches the wick of the candle.
Buddhism's
phenomenological psychology
The establishment of Buddhism predates the field of psychology by over two
millennia; thus, any assessment of Buddhism in terms of psychology
is necessarily a modern invention.[2] One of
the first such assessments occurred when British Indologists
started translating Theravada Buddhism's Abhidhamma from
Pali and Sanskrit texts. Long-term efforts to juxtapose
abhidhammic psychology with Western empirical sciences have been
carried out by such Vajrayana leaders as Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche and the 14th Dalai
Lama.
Overview of the
Abhidhamma
The earliest Buddhist writings are preserved in the three-part
Tipitaka (Pali; Skt. Tripitaka). The third part (or
pitaka, literally "basket") is known as the Abhidhamma (Pali; Skt.
Abhidharma). Ven. Bhikkhu Bodhi, president of the Buddhist Publication
Society, has synopsized the Abhidhamma as follows:
Part of the Tipitaka written in Thai on traditional wood
slices.
- "The system that the Abhidhamma Pitaka articulates is
simultaneously a philosophy, a psychology, and an ethics, all
integrated into the framework of a program for liberation.... The
Abhidhamma's attempt to comprehend the nature of reality, contrary
to that of classical science in the West, does not proceed from the
standpoint of a neutral observer looking outwards towards the
external world. The primary concern of the Abhidhamma is to
understand the nature of experience, and thus the reality on which
it focuses is conscious reality.... For this reason the
philosophical enterprise of the Abhidhamma shades off into a
phenomenological psychology. To facilitate the understanding of
experienced reality, the Abhidhamma embarks upon an elaborate
analysis of the mind as it presents itself to introspective
meditation. It classifies consciousness into a variety of types,
specifies the factors and functions of each type, correlates them
with their objects and physiological bases, and shows how the
different types of consciousness link up with each other and with
material phenomena to constitute the ongoing process of
experience." (Bodhi, 2000, pp. 3-4.)
Western recognition of the phenomenological-psychological aspect
of the Abhidhamma started over a century ago with the work of
British Indologists.
Rhys Davids' early
scholarship (1900)
In 1900, Indologist Caroline A. F. Rhys
Davids published through the Pali Text Society a translation of
the Theravada Abhidhamma's first book, the Dhamma Sangani, and entitled the
translation, "Buddhist Manual of Psychological Ethics" (Rhys
Davids, 2003). In the introduction to this seminal work, Rhys
Davids writes:
- "... Buddhist philosophy is ethical first and last. This is
beyond dispute. But among ethical systems there is a world of
difference in the degree of importance attached to the
psychological prolegomena of ethics.... [T]he Buddhists were, in a
way, more advanced in the psychology of their ethics than Aristotle — in a way, that
is, which would now be called scientific. Rejecting the assumption
of a psyche and of its higher manifestations ..., they were content
to resolve the consciousness of the Ethical Man, as they found
it, into a complex continuum of subjective phenomena.... The
distinguishable groups of dhammā — of states or mental psychoses —
'arise' in every case in consciousness, in obedience to certain
laws of causation, physical and moral — that is, ultimately, as the
outcome of antecedent states of consciousness.... It postulated
other percipients as Berkeley did,
together with, not a Divine cause or source of precepts, but the
implicit Monism of early
thought veiled by a deliberate Agnosticism.... [S]o Buddhism, from a quite
early stage of its development, set itself to analyze and classify
mental processes with remarkable insight and sagacity...." (Rhys
Davids, 1900, pp. xvi-xvii.)[3]
Buddhism's psychological orientation is a theme Rhys Davids
pursued for decades as evidenced by Rhys Davids (1914) and Rhys
Davids (1936).
Trungpa
Rinpoche and the Naropa Institute (1974)
"Buddhism will
come to the West
as a psychology."
- Chogyam Trungpa, 1974[4] |
In his introduction to his 1975 book, Glimpses of the
Abhidharma, Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche wrote:
- "Many modern psychologists have found that the discoveries and
explanations of the abhidharma coincide with their own recent
discoveries and new ideas; as though the abhidharma, which was
taught 2,500 years ago, had been redeveloped in the modern idiom."
(Trungpa, 1975, p.2.)
Trungpa Rinpoche's book goes on to describe the nanosecond
phenomenological sequence by which a sensation becomes conscious
using the Buddhist concepts of the "five aggregates."
In 1974, Trungpa Rinpoche founded the Naropa Institute, now
called Naropa University. Since 1975, this
accredited university has offered degrees in "contemplative
psychology."[5]
The
Dalai Lama and the Mind and Life dialogues (1987)
His Holiness
the 14th
Dalai Lama brings together Buddhists and Western scientists
every two years.
Every two years, since 1987, the Dalai
Lama has convened "Mind and
Life" gatherings of Buddhists and scientists.[6]
Reflecting on one Mind and Life session in March 2000, psychologist
Daniel Goleman
notes:
- "Since the time of Gautama Buddha in the fifth century BC,
an analysis of the mind and its workings has been central to the
practices of his followers. This analysis was codified during the
first millennium after his death within the system called, in the
Pali language of Buddha's day, Abhidhamma (or
Abhidharma in Sanskrit), which means 'ultimate doctrine'.... Every
branch of Buddhism today has a version of these basic psychological
teachings on the mind, as well as its own refinements" (Goleman,
2004, pp. 72-73).
Psychotherapy and
Enlightenment
British barrister Christmas Humphreys has referred to
mid-twentieth century collaborations between psychoanalysts and
Buddhist scholars as a meeting between "two of the most powerful
forces operating in the Western mind today."[7] Ever
since, a variety of renowned teachers, clinicians and writers such
as D.T. Suzuki, Carl Jung, Erich Fromm, Alan Watts, Tara Brach, Jack Kornfield, Joseph
Goldstein, and Sharon Salzberg have attempted to
bridge and integrate psychology and Buddhism in a manner that
offers meaning, inspiration and healing. More recently, some
traditional Buddhist practitioners have expressed concern that
attempts to view Buddhism through the lens of Western psychology
diminishes the Buddha's liberating message.
Suzuki & Jung
(1948)
A number of psychologists have identified a pivotal
collaboration between Buddhism and psychology was when
psychoanalyst Carl Jung
wrote the foreword to Zen scholar Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki's Introduction
to Zen Buddhism, first published together in 1948.[8] In his
foreword, Jung highlights the enlightenment experience of satori as the unsurpassed
transformation to wholeness for Zen practitioners. And while
acknowledging the inadequacy of Westerners' attempts to comprehend
satori through the
lens of Western intellectualism,[9] Jung
nonetheless contends:
- "The only movement within our culture which partly has, and
partly should have, some understanding of these aspirations [for
such enlightenment] is psychotherapy. It is therefore not a matter
of chance that this foreword is written by a psychotherapist....
Taken basically, psychotherapy is a dialectic relationship between
the doctor and the patient.... The goal is transformation...."
(Suzuki & Jung, 1948, p. 25).
Suzuki & Fromm
(1957)
Referencing Jung and Suzuki's collaboration as well as the
efforts of others, humanistic
philosopher and psychoanalyst Erich Fromm noted:
- "...[T]here is an unmistakable and increasing interest in Zen
Buddhism among psychoanalysts" (Fromm et al., 1960, pp.
77-78).[10]
Suzuki, Fromm and other psychoanalysts collaborated at a 1957
workshop on "Zen Buddhism and Psychoanalysis" in Cuernavaca,
Mexico.[11] In
his contribution to this workshop, Fromm declares: "Psychoanalysis
is a characteristic expression of Western man's spiritual crisis,
and an attempt to find a solution" (Fromm et al., 1960, p.
80). Fromm contends that, at the turn of the twentieth century,
most psychotherapeutic patients sought treatment due to
medical-like symptoms that hindered their social functioning.
However, by mid-century, the majority of psychoanalytic patients
lacked overt symptoms and functioned well but instead suffered from
an "inner deadness":
- "The common suffering is the alienation from oneself, from
one's fellow man, and from nature; the awareness that life runs out
of one's hand like sand, and that one will die without having
lived; that one lives in the midst of plenty and yet is joyless"
(Fromm et al. pp. 85-86).
Paraphrasing Suzuki broadly, Fromm continues:
- "Zen is the art of seeing into the nature of one's
being; it is a way from bondage to freedom; it
liberates our natural energies; ... and it impels us to
express our faculty for happiness and love (p. 115).
- "...[W]hat can be said with more certainty is that the
knowledge of Zen, and a concern with it, can have a most fertile
and clarifying influence on the theory and technique of
psychoanalysis. Zen, different as it is in its method from
psychoanalysis, can sharpen the focus, throw new light on the
nature of insight, and heighten the sense of what it is to see,
what it is to be creative, what it is to overcome the affective
contaminations and false intellectualizations which are the
necessary results of experience based on the subject-object split"
(p. 140).
Mainstream teachers and
popularizers
In 1961, Philosopher and Orientalist Alan Watts wrote:
- "If we look deeply into such ways of life as Buddhism and Taoism, Vedanta and Yoga, we do not find either philosophy or religion
as these are understood in the West. We find something more nearly
resembling psychotherapy.... The main resemblance between these
Eastern ways of life and Western psychotherapy is in the concern of
both with bringing about changes of consciousness, changes in our
ways of feeling our own existence and our relation to human society
and the natural world. The psychotherapist has, for the most part,
been interested in changing the consciousness of peculiarly
disturbed individuals. The disciplines of Buddhism and Taoism are,
however, concerned with changing the consciousness of normal,
socially adjusted people." (Watts, 1975, pp. 3-4.)
Since Watts's early observations and musings, there have been
many other important contributors to the contemporary
popularization of the integration of Buddhist meditation with psychology
including Kornfield (1993), Joseph
Goldstein, Tara
Brach, Epstein
(1995) and Nhat
Hanh (1998).
Caveats regarding
"Romantic Buddhism"
| |
Romantic /
humanistic
psychology |
early
Buddhism |
spiritual
illness |
divided self |
clinging |
ultimate
experience |
feeling of
oneness |
knowledge of
Awakening |
|
cure |
on-going
personal
integration |
Awakening |
Tracing the roots of modern Western spiritual ideals from German
Romantic Era philosopher Immanuel Kant through American
psychologist and philosopher William James, Jung and humanistic
psychologist Abraham Maslow, Thanissaro
Bhikkhu (undated) identifies broad commonalities
between "Romantic/humanistic psychology" and early Buddhism:
beliefs in human (versus divine) intervention with an approach that
is experiential, pragmatic and therapeutic. However, Thanissaro
asserts that there are also core differences between
Romantic/humanistic psychology and Buddhism. These are summarized
in the table to the right. Thanissaro implicitly deems those who
impose Romantic/humanistic goals on the Buddha's message as
"Buddhist Romantics."
Recognizing the widespread alienation and social fragmentation
of modern life, Thanissaro Bhikkhu writes:
- "When Buddhist Romanticism speaks to these needs, it opens the
gate to areas of dharma [the Buddha's teachings] that
can help many people find the solace they’re looking for. In doing
so, it augments the work of psychotherapy....
- "However, Buddhist Romanticism also helps close the gate to
areas of the dharma that would challenge people in their hope for
an ultimate happiness based on interconnectedness. Traditional
dharma calls for renunciation and sacrifice, on the grounds that
all interconnectedness is essentially unstable, and any happiness
based on this instability is an invitation to suffering. True
happiness has to go beyond interdependence and interconnectedness
to the unconditioned. ... [T]he gate [of Buddhist Romanticism]
closes off radical areas of the dharma designed to address levels
of suffering remaining even when a sense of wholeness has been
mastered." (Thanissaro,
undated.)
Buddhist techniques
in clinical settings
For over a millennium, throughout the world, Buddhist practices
have been used for non-Buddhist ends.[12] More
recently, Western clinical psychologists, theorists and researchers
have incorporated Buddhist practices in widespread formalized
psychotherapies. Buddhist mindfulness practices
have been explicitly incorporated into a variety of psychological
treatments.[13] More
tangentially, psychotherapies dealing with cognitive restructuring share
core principles with ancient Buddhist antidotes to personal
suffering.
Mindfulness practices
Fromm (2002, pp. 49–52) distinguishes between two types of
meditative techniques that have been used in psychotherapy:
- auto-suggestion used to induce relaxation;
and,
- meditation "to achieve a higher degree of non-attachment, of
non-greed, and of non-illusion; briefly, those that serve to reach
a higher level of being" (p. 50).
Fromm attributes techniques associated with the latter to
Buddhist mindfulness practices.[14]
Two increasingly popular therapeutic practices using Buddhist
mindfulness techniques are Jon Kabat-Zinn's Mindfulness-based
Stress Reduction (MBSR) and Marsha M. Linehan's Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT). Other
prominent therapies that use mindfulness include Steven C.
Hayes' Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)
and, based on MBSR, Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT)
(Segal et al., 2002).
Clinical researchers have found Buddhist mindfulness practices to
help alleviate anxiety, depression and certain personality
disorders.
Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction
(MBSR):
Kabat-Zinn developed the eight-week MBSR program over a ten year
period with over four thousand patients at the University of
Massachusetts Medical Center (Kabat-Zinn, 1990, p. 1). Describing
the MBSR program, Kabat-Zinn writes:
- "This 'work' involves above all the regular, disciplined
practice of moment-to-moment awareness or mindfulness, the
complete 'owning' of each moment of your experience, good, bad, or
ugly. This is the essence of full catastrophe living." (p. 11)
Kabat-Zinn, a one-time Zen
practitioner,[15] goes
on to write:
- "Although at this time mindfulness meditation is most commonly
taught and practiced within the context of Buddhism, its essence is
universal.... Yet it is no accident that mindfulness comes out of
Buddhism, which has as its overriding concerns the relief of
suffering and the dispelling of illusions." (pp. 12-13)
Not surprisingly, in terms of clinical diagnoses, MBSR has
proven beneficial for people with depression and anxiety disorders;
however, the program is meant to serve anyone experiencing
significant stress.
Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT):
In writing about DBT, Zen practitioner[16]
Linehan (1993a, p. 19) states:
- "As its name suggests, its overriding characteristic is an
emphasis on 'dialectics' – that is, the reconciliation of opposites
in a continual process of synthesis.... This emphasis on acceptance
as a balance to change flows directly from the integration of a
perspective drawn from Eastern (Zen) practice with Western
psychological practice."[17]
Similarly, Linehan (1993b, p. 63) writes:
- "Mindfulness skills are central to DBT.... They are the first
skills taught and are [reviewed] ... every week.... The skills are
psychological and behavioral versions of meditation practices from
Eastern spiritual training. I have drawn most heavily from the
practice of Zen...."
Controlled clinical studies have demonstrated DBT's
effectiveness for people with borderline personality
disorder.[18]
Cognitive restructuring
Dr. Albert
Ellis, considered the "grandfather of cognitive-behavioral therapy" (CBT), has
written:
- "Many of the principles incorporated in the theory of rational-emotive
psychotherapy are not new; some of them, in fact, were
originally stated several thousands of years ago, especially by the
Greek and Roman Stoic philosophers (such as Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius) and by some of the
ancient Taoist and Buddhist thinkers (see Suzuki, 1956, and Watts,
1959, 1960)." (Ellis, 1991, p. 35.)[19]
To give but one example, Buddhism identifies anger and ill-will
as basic hindrances to spiritual development (see, for instance,
the Five Hindrances, Ten Fetters and kilesas). A common Buddhist antidote
for anger is the use of active contemplation of loving thoughts
(see, for instance, metta). This is similar to using a CBT
technique known as "emotional training" which Ellis (1997, pp.
86–87) describes in the following manner:
- "Think of an intensely pleasant experience you have had with
the person with whom you now feel angry. When you have fantasized
such a pleasant experience and have actually given yourself
unusually good, intensely warm feelings toward that person as a
result of this remembrance, continue the process. Recall pleasant
experiences and good feelings, and try to make these feelings
paramount over your feelings of hostility."[20]
Four Noble Truths and
the medical model
Broadly speaking, differences between traditional Buddhism and
contemporary institutionalized Western psychology[21] can
be conceived in terms used in the following table.
| |
Buddhism (Four Noble Truths) |
Western psychology |
|
problem |
suffering
(dukkha)[22] |
significant distress, disability, pain, loss of freedom,
suicidality[23] |
|
etiology |
craving (tanha), ignorance (avijja)[24] |
conditioning, genetics, biology, childhood development,
socialization |
|
goal |
Enlightenment (bodhi),
Nirvana[25] |
normal or higher functioning, lack of initial symptoms |
|
treatment |
Noble
Eightfold Path[26] |
counseling, therapy, medication, systems advocacy |
See also
Notes
- ^
Manjushrimitra (undated). Bodhicittabhavana. NB: An
English rendering of this text by Kunpal Tulku (2005) is entitled
The Cultivation of Enlightened Mind. This is an English
rendering from the Tibetan translation of Sri Simha and the Tibetan
translator Bhikshu Vairocanaraksita, the original text is no longer
extant. Source: [1] (accessed:
November 28, 2007)
- ^
Buddhist doctrine was first articulated by the Buddha (ca. 563 BCE
to ca. 483 BCE). The establishment of a self-conscious field of
psychology as the empirical assessment of human mental activities
and behavior is often identified with the work of Wilhelm Wundt
(August 16, 1832 – August 31, 1920).
- ^
The notion that consciousness is a sequence of states, like cells
in a film strip, while not explicitly contrary to notions of
consciousness found in the Pali nikayas, is
found explicitly in the Pali Abhidhamma (see Bodhi,
2000, p. 29).
- ^
Cited in Goleman, 2004, p. 72. Goleman, who was teaching psychology
at Harvard University at the time, goes on to write: "The very idea
that Buddhism had anything to do with psychology was at the time
for most of us in the field patently absurd. But that attitude
reflected more our own naivete than anything to do with Buddhism.
It was news that Buddhism — like many of the world's great
spiritual traditions — harbored a theory of mind and its workings"
(p. 72).
- ^
Naropa University has also been a training ground and meeting place
for many of today's most prolific popularizers of a
Buddhism-informed psychology such as Jack Kornfield and a psychologically
savvy Buddhism such as Joseph Goldstein (Schwartz, 1995, pp.
315-16).
- ^
Books that have documented these meetings include Begley (2007),
Davidson & Harrington (2002), Goleman (1997), Goleman (2004),
Harrington & Zajonc (2006), Haywood & Varela (2001),
Houshmand et al.. (1999), Varela (1997), and Zajonc &
Houshmand (2004).
- ^
Fromm et al., (1960), back cover. Explicitly, in regards
to the book associated with the 1957 Cuernavaca, Mexico conference
mentioned below, Humphries wrote: "This is the first major attempt
to bring together two of the most powerful forces operating in the
Western mind today."
- ^
As referenced further below, both Fromm (1960) and Ellis (1962)
cite this text as influential.
- ^
In particular, Jung quotes Rudolf Otto's stating, "Zen is neither
psychology nor philosophy" (Suzuki & Jung, 1948, p. 11,
n. 1).
- ^
To support this statement, Fromm (1960, p. 78, n. 1)
refers to Jung's foreword to Suzuki (1949), Benoit (1955), and Sato
(1958). Fromm et al.. (1960, p. 78) also refers to Karen Horney who "was
intensely interested in Zen Buddhism during the last years of her
life."
- ^
Fromm et al.. (1960, p. vii). Selected presentations from
this conference are included in Fromm et al. (1960).
Fromm's interest in Buddhism extended to multiple Buddhist
schools as evidenced by his writing the foreword for
Nyanaponika et al. (1986).
- ^
For instance, ninth century Chinese Patriarch Zongmi referred to non-Buddhist uses of Buddhist
meditation practices as bonpu meditation. For more
information, see Zongmi's "Five Types of Zen".
- ^
Adelman, K. (2005, May 1). What i've learned: Tara Brach.
Washingtonian Magazine.
- ^
For an authoritative source regarding Buddhist mindfulness
meditation, Fromm (2002) references Nyanaponika (1996). Fromm
(2002, pp. 52-53) goes on to write:
- "...[T]here are two core doctrines acceptable to many who, like
myself, are not Buddhists, yet are deeply impressed by the core of
Buddhist teaching. I refer first of all to the doctrine that the
goal of life is to overcome greed, hate, and ignorance. In this
respect Buddhism does not basically differ from Jewish and
Christian ethical norms. More important, and different from the
Jewish and Christian tradition, is another element of Buddhist
thinking: the demand for optimal awareness of the processes inside
and outside oneself."
For an overview of Buddhist mindfulness practices, see Buddhist
meditation and Satipatthana Sutta.
- ^
In Kabat-Zinn (2005, p. 26), for instance, he writes:
- Because I practice and teach mindfulness, I have the recurring
experience that people frequently make the assumption that I am a
Buddhist. When asked, I usually respond that I am not a Buddhist
(although there was a period in my life when I did think of myself
in that way, and trained and continue to train in and have huge
respect and love for different Buddhist traditions and practices),
but I am a student of Buddhist meditation, and a devoted one, not
not because I am devoted to Buddhism per se, but because I have
found its teachings and its practices to be so profound and so
universally applicable, revealing and healing."
- ^
According to Kabat-Zinn (2005, p. 431): "Marsha [Linehan] herself
is a long-time practitioner of Zen, and DBT incorporates the spirit
and principles of mindfulness and whatever degree of formal
practice is possible...."
- ^
The parenthetical "(Zen)" is included in Linehan's actual
text.
- ^
Regarding DBT's empirical effectiveness, Linehan (1993b, p. 1)
cites Linehan et al.. (1991), Linehan & Heard (1993),
and Linehan et al.. (in press). Clinical experience has
shown DBT to be effective for people with borderline personality
disorder as well as other Axis II Cluster B disorders.
- ^
Elsewhere in Ellis (1991, pp. 336-37), in response to concerns
voiced by Watts (1960) regarding overly rationalistic
psychotherapy, Dr. Ellis expresses a caveat specifically regarding
Zen-like spiritual pursuits. Dr. Ellis notes that "perhaps the main
goal" of a patient of rational-emotive therapy "is that of
commitment, risk-taking, joy of being; and sensory experiencing, as
long as it does not merely consist of short-range self-defeating
hedonism of a childish variety...." Dr. Ellis then adds:
- "Even some of the Zen Buddhist strivings after extreme
sensation, or satori,
would not be thoroughly incompatible with some of the goals a
devotee of rational-emotive living might seek for himself — as long
as he did not seek this mode of sensing as an escape from facing
some of his fundamental anxieties or hostilities...."
- ^
In the example cited from Ellis (1997), a person attempts to
replace their hostile feelings with pleasant feelings associated
with the same individual. In general, with Buddhist metta
practice, one elicits feelings of loving kindness by contemplating
on a benefactor and one then uses these self-elicited warm feelings
to then permeate the experiencing of a perceived "enemy." Moreover,
Buddhist metta practice directs loving kindness towards
all beings, near or far, kind or brutal, human or
non-human.
- ^
For instance, as embodied by the DSM-IV-TR.
- ^
In the Dhammacakkappavattana
Sutta, the Buddha defined suffering (dukkha) in the
following terms:
- "Suffering, as a noble truth, is this: Birth is suffering,
aging is suffering, sickness is suffering, death is suffering,
sorrow and lamentation, pain, grief and despair are suffering;
association with the loathed is suffering, dissociation from the
loved is suffering, not to get what one wants is suffering — in
short, suffering is the five categories of clinging objects."
(Ñanamoli, 1993.)
- ^
For example, the DSM-IV
states:
- "In DSM-IV, each of the mental disorders is conceptualized as a
clinically significant behavioral or psychological syndrome or
pattern that occurs in an individual and that is associated with
present distress (e.g., a paniful symptom) or disability (i.e.,
impairment in one or more important areas of functioning) or with a
significantly increased risk of suffering death, pain, disability,
or an important loss of freedom." (APA, 1994, p. xxi).
The DSM further adds caveats about social norms, etc.
(Ibid., pp. xxi - xxii). While the DSM's definition is
used here for the purpose of creating a simple comparison between
Buddhism and Western psychology, readers should be aware that the
DSM worldview is not universally embraced by psychotherapists in
their day-to-day practice of psychological assessment and
treatment.
- ^
Ignorance (avijja) is not identified as part of the Four Noble
Truths but is seen as the ultimate cause in the
analysis of fundamental Buddhist articulation of Dependent Co-arising.
- ^
In terms of the Four Noble Truths themselves, the
identified goal is the "cessation" (nirodha) of suffering
(dukkha). For Theravada practitioners, this is synonymous
with Nirvana (Pali:
Nibbana). For Mahayana practitioners, this is often
associated with "Enlightenment" (bodhi).
- ^
The Buddha's Noble Eightfold Path has been categorized as a Threefold
Training of virtue, mental development and wisdom. From a
Buddhist psychological perspective, virtuous thoughts, speech and
behaviors diminish tendencies that hinder full mental
development. Mental development through mindfulness and concentration
meditation further fosters virtuous behavior as well as enables
one to develop mental factors sufficient to unroot the fetters
that obscure true freedom. Through the pursuit of virtue and mental
development, one develops wisdom. Thus, the whole course is one of
psychological development. In Western psychology, Buddhist notions
about the psychological benefits of virtuous behavior (and the
mental factors that foster virtue) are generally relegated to the
philosophical fields of ethics and theology.
Bibliography
- Begley, Sharon (2007). Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain:
How a New Science Reveals Our Extraordinary Potential to Transform
Ourselves. Ballantine Books. ISBN 978-1-4000-6390-1.
- Benoit, Hubert (1955, 1995). The Supreme Doctrine.
Portland, OR: Sussex Academic Press. Cited in Fromm et
al.. (1960). ISBN 1898723141.
- Bodhi,
Bhikkhu (ed.) (2000). A Comprehensive Manual of Abhidhamma:
The Abhidhammattha Sangaha of Ācariya Anuruddha. Seattle, WA:
BPS Pariyatti Editions. ISBN 1-928706-02-9.
- Davidson, Richard J. & Anne Harrington (eds.) (2002).
Visions of Compassion: Western Scientists and Tibetan Buddhists
Examine Human Nature. NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN
0-19-513043-X.
- Ellis, Albert
(1962, 1991). Reason and Emotion in Psychotherapy. NY:
Carol Publishing Group. ISBN 0-8065-0909-0.
- Ellis, Albert (1977, 1997). Anger: How to Live with and
without It. Secaucus, NJ: Carol Publishing Group. ISBN
0-8065-0937-6.
- Epstein, Mark
(1995). Thoughts without a Thinker: Psychotherapy from a
Buddhist Perspective. NY: Basic Books. ISBN
0-465-08585-7.
- Fromm, Erich, D. T. Suzuki &
Richard De Martino (1960). Zen Buddhism and
Psychoanalysis. NY: Harper & Row. ISBN 0-06-090175-6.
- Fromm, Erich (1989, 2002). The Art of Being. NY:
Continuum. ISBN 0-8264-0673-4.
- Goleman,
Daniel (ed.) (1997). Healing Emotions: Conversations With
the Dalai Lama on Mindfulness, Emotions, and Health. Boston:
Shambhala Publications. ISBN 1-57062-212-4.
- Goleman, Daniel (2004). Destructive Emotions: A Scientific
Dialogue with the Dalai Lama. NY: Bantam Dell. ISBN
0-553-38105-9.
- Gyatso, Geshe Kelsang (2nd. ed., 1997) Understanding the
Mind: The Nature and Power of the Mind. Tharpa
Publications. ISBN 978-0-948006-78-4
- Harrington, Anne & Arthur Zajonc (2006). The Dalai Lama
at MIT. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674023196.
- Hayward, Jeremy W. & Francisco J. Varela (eds.) (1992,
2001). Gentle Bridges: Conversations with the Dalai Lama on the
Sciences of Mind. Boston: Shambhala Publications. ISBN
1-57062-893-9.
- Houshmand, Zara, Robert B. Livingston & B. Alan Wallace
(eds.) (1999). Consciousness at the Crossroads: Conversations
with the Dalai Lama on Brain Science and Buddhism. Ithica:
Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 1-55939-127-8.
- Kabat-Zinn,
Jon (1990). Full Catastrophe Living: Using the Wisdom of
Your Body and Mind to Face Stress, Pain, and Illness. NY: Dell
Publishing. ISBN 0-385-30312-2.
- Kabat-Zinn, Jon (2005). Coming to Our Senses: Healing
Ourselves and the World Through Mindfulness. Hyperion. ISBN
0786886544.
- Kornfield,
Jack (1993). A Path with Heart: A Guide through the Perils
and Promises of Spiritual Life. NY: Bantam Books. ISBN
0-553-37211-4.
- Linehan,
Marsha M. (1993a). Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment of
Borderline Personality Disorder. NY: Guilford Press. ISBN
0-89862-183-6.
- Linehan, Marsha M. (1993b). Skills Training Manual for
Treating Borderline Personality Disorder. NY: Guilford Press.
ISBN 0-89862-034-1.
- Linehan, M. M., H. E. Armstong, A. Suarez, D. Allmon & H.
L. Heard (1991). "Cognitive-behavioral treatment of chronically
parasuicidal borderline patients." Archives of General
Psychiatry, 48, 100-1064. Cited in Linehan (1993b).
- Linehan, M. M., & H. L. Heard (1993). "Impact of treatment
accessibility on clinical course of parasuicidal patients." In
reply to R.E. Hoffman [Letter to the editor]. Archives of
General Psychiatry, 50, 157-158. Cited in Linehan
(1993b).
- Linehan, M. M., H. L. Heard, & H. E. Armstrong (in press).
"Naturalistic follow-up of a behavioral treatment for chronically
suicidal borderline patients. Archives of General
Psychiatry. Cited in Linehan (1993b).
- Nyanaponika Thera (1954, 1996).
The Heart of Buddhist Meditation: A Handbook of Mental Training
based on the Buddha's Way of Mindfulness. York Beach, ME:
Samuel Weiser. ISBN 0-87728-073-8.
- Nyanaponika Thera, Bhikkhu Bodhi (ed.) & Erich Fromm (fwd.)
(1986). Visions of Dhamma: Buddhist Writings of Nyanaponika
Thera. York Beach, ME: Weiser Books. ISBN 0877286698.
- Rhys Davids, Caroline A.
F. ([1900], 2003). Buddhist Manual of Psychological Ethics,
of the Fourth Century B.C., Being a Translation, now made for the
First Time, from the Original Pāli, of the First Book of the
Abhidhamma-Piṭaka, entitled Dhamma-Saṅgaṇi (Compendium of States or
Phenomena). Whitefish, MT: Kessinger Publishing. ISBN
0-7661-4702-9.
- Rhys Davids, Caroline A. F. (1914). Buddhist Psychology: An
Inquiry into the Analysis and Theory of Mind in Pali
Literature.
- Rhys Davids, Caroline A. F. (1936). Birth of Indian
Psychology and its Development in Buddhism.
- Sato, Koji (1958). "Psychotherapeutic Implications of Zen" in
Psychologia, An International Journal of Psychology in the
Orient. Vol. I, No. 4 (1958). Cited in Fromm et al..
(1960).
- Schwartz, Tony (1996). What Really Matters: Searching for
Wisdom in America. NY: Bantam Books. ISBN 0-533-37492-3.
- Segal, Zindel V., J. Mark G. Williams, & John D. Teasdale
(2002). Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Depression: A
New Approach to Preventing Relapse. NY: Guilford Press. ISBN
1-57230-706-4.
- Suzuki, D.T.
& Carl G. Jung
(fwd.) (1948, 1964, 1991). An Introduction to Zen
Buddhism. NY: Grove Press. ISBN 0-8021-3055-0.
- Suzuki, D.T. (1949, 1956). Zen Buddhism. NY: Doubleday
Anchor Books. Cited in Ellis (1991) and Fromm (1960).
- Trungpa, Chogyam (1975, 2001). Glimpses
of Abhidharma: From a Seminar on Buddhist Psychology. Boston,
MA: Shambhala Publications. ISBN 1-57062-764-9.
- Varela,
Francisco J. (ed.) (1997). Sleeping, Dreaming, and Dying:
An Exploration of Consciousness with the Dalai Lama.
Somerville, MA: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-123-8.
- Watts, Alan W.
(1959). The Way of Zen. NY: New American Library. Cited in
Ellis (1991).
- Watts, Alan W. (1960). Nature, Man and Sex. NY: New
American Library. Cited in Ellis (1991).
- Watts, Alan W. (1961, 1975). Psychotherapy East and
West. NY: Random House. ISBN 0-394-71610-8.
- Zajonc, Arthur (ed.) with Zara Houshmand (2004). The New
Physics and Cosmology: Dialogues with the Dalai Lama. NY:
Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-515994-2.
Related
texts
- Fryba, Mirko (1995). The Practice of Happiness: Exercises
& Techniques for Developing Mindfulness, Wisdom, and Joy.
Boston: Shambhala. ISBN 1-57062-123-3.
External
links
Early
scholarship
Inter-disciplinary
collaborations
Mainstream teachers and
popularizers
Caveats
and criticisms
Buddhism
and depression
- Domanassa: a site dedicated to the Buddhist view
on depression.