Dhikr as Mindfulness: Meditative Remembrance in Sufism

IF 1.3 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Marc Applebaum
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Abstract

Mindfulness practices adapted from Theravada Buddhism have become widespread among many in Western societies who seek stress reduction and greater present-centeredness. Less well-known is the mindfulness practice in Sufism–the mystical path of Islam–known as meditative remembrance ( dhikr). While mindfulness is often understood as a self-help technique, the aim of Buddhist and Sufi meditative paths is not limited to enhancing the well-being of a self that is envisioned as strictly bounded. Rather, both meditative paths aim at unitive mystical experience, which is held to profoundly transform the meaning of the practitioner’s selfhood as such. Whereas Buddhism’s non-self-doctrine is generally understood to hold that personal selfhood is an illusion, this is not the case for Akbari Sufism. This inquiry takes a phenomenological approach, exploring the varied meanings of being or “having” a self in the context of mindfulness, and contrasting these with the humanistic psychology of Abraham Maslow. I contrast Theravada and Akbari Sufism’s understandings of the aim of meditation and the meanings of selfhood and compare both traditions with Abraham Maslow’s view of self-transcendence.
作为正念的Dhikr:苏非主义的冥想记忆
从小乘佛教改编的正念练习在西方社会中广泛传播,他们寻求减轻压力和更大的以现在为中心。鲜为人知的是苏菲派的正念练习——伊斯兰教的神秘之路——被称为冥想记忆(dhikr)。虽然正念通常被理解为一种自助技巧,但佛教和苏菲派冥想路径的目的并不局限于增强自我的幸福,而自我的幸福是被严格限制的。更确切地说,这两种冥想方式的目标都是统一的神秘体验,这被认为是为了深刻地改变实践者自我的意义。虽然佛教的非自我主义通常被理解为认为个人的自我是一种幻觉,但阿克巴里苏非主义却不是这样。本研究采用现象学方法,探索在正念背景下存在或“拥有”自我的各种含义,并将其与亚伯拉罕·马斯洛的人本主义心理学进行对比。我对比了上座部苏菲派和阿克巴里苏菲派对冥想目的和自我意义的理解,并将这两种传统与亚伯拉罕·马斯洛的自我超越观进行了比较。
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来源期刊
Journal of Humanistic Psychology
Journal of Humanistic Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
5.90%
发文量
44
期刊介绍: The Journal of Humanistic Psychology is an interdisciplinary forum for contributions, controversies and diverse statements pertaining to humanistic psychology. It addresses personal growth, interpersonal encounters, social problems and philosophical issues. An international journal of human potential, self-actualization, the search for meaning and social change, the Journal of Humanistic Psychology was founded by Abraham Maslow and Anthony Sutich in 1961. It is the official journal of the Association for Humanistic Psychology.
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