The Somaesthetics of Heaviness and Hara in Zen Buddhist Meditation

Q3 Arts and Humanities
Geoffrey Ashton
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Breath is a grounding phenomenon present in many forms of Buddhist meditation. In traditional Buddhist meditations (including ānāpānasati and vipassanā), the practitioner observes the breath, surveys various physical and mental phenomena, and from there realizes that suffering (duḥkha) is not ultimately binding (and along the way, they may experience the nonduality of body and mind). Similarly, the seated meditation practice (zazen) deployed by Rinzai Zen begins with attention to breath, refines one’s attention to psycho-physical sensations, and fosters a realization of mind-body unity that enables the practitioner to face duḥkha. But this form of Zen recasts the respiratory philosophy of early Buddhism in some important respects. This paper explores how these adaptations take place in terms of an explicitly somaesthetic orientation. Emphasizing the postural form of the body, the capacity to sense the pull of gravity, and the performance of breathing from the hara (lower belly), zazen seeks to awaken the somatic body by transforming the weight of suffering into nondual, vital energy.
禅宗冥想中 "重 "与 "原 "的体态美学
呼吸是存在于多种佛教禅修形式中的一种接地现象。在传统的佛教禅修(包括ānāpānasati 和 vipassanā)中,修行者观察呼吸,审视各种身体和心理现象,并从中认识到痛苦(duḥkha)最终并不具有约束力(在此过程中,他们可能会体验到身心不二)。同样,临济禅所采用的坐禅(禅定)从关注呼吸开始,使人更加关注心理和生理上的感觉,并培养身心合一的意识,使修行者能够面对 "苦"。但这种形式的禅在某些重要方面重塑了早期佛教的呼吸哲学。本文从明确的体质美学取向出发,探讨了这些改编是如何发生的。禅宗强调身体的姿势形式、感知重力牵引的能力,以及从腹部(下腹部)开始呼吸的表现,旨在通过将痛苦的重压转化为不二的生命能量来唤醒躯体。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Poligrafi
Poligrafi Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
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