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Meditation und ethisches Verhalten

Swami Veda Bharati zum Artikel der New York Times:

Was die Rishis (Weisen) wie Patanjali vor Jahrtausenden eingeführt haben, wird heute durch moderne wissenschaftliche Methoden zunehmend als gültig nachgewiesen. 

Es gibt vielfältige Studien von ähnlicher Art wie diese. Hieran wird deutlich, warum Patanjali die citta-parikarmas (Methoden der Reinigung des Geistes, YS 1.33) wie Freundlichkeit und Mitgefühl als Teil der Praxis der Yoga-Meditation mit einbezogen hat. Ich stimme mit dem Verfasser des Artikels überein, dass Meditationspraxis für Zwecke wie Prüfungen zu absolvieren und andere nützliche Belanglosigkeiten nicht das ist, was Buddha oder Patanjali im Sinn hatten.

Möge deine Meditation dich in der Entfaltung von Freundlichkeit und Mitgefühl unterstützen. Mögen Freundlichkeit und Mitgefühl dich in deiner Meditation unterstützen.

Remarks by Swami Veda Bharati (english):

What the rishis like Patanjali established thousands of years ago, its veracity is being increasingly proved by modern scientific methods.

There are many such scientific studies as this one attached.

That is why Patanjali included chitta-parikarmas  purifications of mind, YS 1.33), like amity and compassion as part of the practice of yoga meditation. I agree with the writer of the article that practising meditation to pass examinations - and such other extraneous benefits - is not what Buddha or Patanjali had in mind.

May your meditations help you in amity and compassion. May amity and compassion help your meditations.

New York Times:
The Morality of Meditation

By DAVID DeSTENO
Published: July 5, 2013 (New York Times)

Meditation is fast becoming a fashionable tool for improving your mind. With mounting scientific evidence that the practice can enhance creativity, memory and scores on standardized intelligence tests, interest in its practical benefits is growing. A number of “mindfulness” training programs, like that developed by the engineer Chade-Meng Tan at Google, and conferences like Wisdom 2.0 for business and tech leaders, promise attendees insight into how meditation can be used to augment individual performance, leadership and productivity.

This is all well and good, but if you stop to think about it, there’s a bit of a disconnect between the (perfectly commendable) pursuit of these benefits and the purpose for which meditation was originally intended. Gaining competitive advantage on exams and increasing creativity in business weren’t of the utmost concern to Buddha and other early meditation teachers. As Buddha himself said, “I teach one thing and one only: that is, suffering and the end of suffering.” For Buddha, as for many modern spiritual leaders, the goal of meditation was as simple as that. The heightened control of the mind that meditation offers was supposed to help its practitioners see the world in a new and more compassionate way, allowing them to break free from the categorizations (us/them, self/other) that commonly divide people from one another.

But does meditation work as promised? Is its originally intended effect — the reduction of suffering — empirically demonstrable?

To put the question to the test, my lab, led in this work by the psychologist Paul Condon, joined with the neuroscientist Gaëlle Desbordes and the Buddhist lama Willa Miller to conduct an experiment whose publication is forthcoming in the journal Psychological Science. We recruited 39 people from the Boston area who were willing to take part in an eight-week course on meditation (and who had never taken any such course before). We then randomly assigned 20 of them to take part in weekly meditation classes, which also required them to practice at home using guided recordings. The remaining 19 were told that they had been placed on a waiting list for a future course.

After the eight-week period of instruction, we invited the participants to the lab for an experiment that purported to examine their memory, attention and related cognitive abilities. But as you might anticipate, what actually interested us was whether those who had been meditating would exhibit greater compassion in the face of suffering. To find out, we staged a situation designed to test the participants’ behavior before they were aware that the experiment had begun.

When a participant entered the waiting area for our lab, he (or she) found three chairs, two of which were already occupied. Naturally, he sat in the remaining chair. As he waited, a fourth person, using crutches and wearing a boot for a broken foot, entered the room and audibly sighed in pain as she leaned uncomfortably against a wall. The other two people in the room — who, like the woman on crutches, secretly worked for us — ignored the woman, thus confronting the participant with a moral quandary. Would he act compassionately, giving up his chair for her, or selfishly ignore her plight?

The results were striking. Although only 16 percent of the nonmeditators gave up their seats — an admittedly disheartening fact — the proportion rose to 50 percent among those who had meditated. This increase is impressive not solely because it occurred after only eight weeks of meditation, but also because it did so within the context of a situation known to inhibit considerate behavior: witnessing others ignoring a person in distress — what psychologists call the bystander effect — reduces the odds that any single individual will help. Nonetheless, the meditation increased the compassionate response threefold.

Although we don’t yet know why meditation has this effect, one of two explanations seems likely. The first rests on meditation’s documented ability to enhance attention, which might in turn increase the odds of noticing someone in pain (as opposed to being lost in one’s own thoughts). My favored explanation, though, derives from a different aspect of meditation: its ability to foster a view that all beings are interconnected. The psychologist Piercarlo Valdesolo and I have found that any marker of affiliation between two people, even something as subtle as tapping their hands together in synchrony, causes them to feel more compassion for each other when distressed. The increased compassion of meditators, then, might stem directly from meditation’s ability to dissolve the artificial social distinctions — ethnicity, religion, ideology and the like — that divide us.

Supporting this view, recent findings by the neuroscientists Helen Weng, Richard Davidson and colleagues confirm that even relatively brief training in meditative techniques can alter neural functioning in brain areas associated with empathic understanding of others’ distress — areas whose responsiveness is also modulated by a person’s degree of felt associations with others.

So take heart. The next time you meditate, know that you’re not just benefiting yourself, you’re also benefiting your neighbors, community members and as-yet-unknown strangers by increasing the odds that you’ll feel their pain when the time comes, and act to lessen it as well.

David DeSteno is a professor of psychology at Northeastern University, where he directs the Social Emotions Group. He is the author of the forthcoming book “The Truth About Trust: How It Determines Success in Life, Love, Learning, and More.”

A version of this op-ed appeared in print on July 7, 2013, on page SR12 of the New York edition with the headline: The Morality of Meditation

(Quelle:  New York Times)

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