ABSTRACT

Many claim that meditation is effective in the treatment of many ailments associated with stress and high blood pressure, and in the management of pain. While there are many popular books on meditation, few embrace the science as well as the art of meditation. In this volume, Shapiro and Walsh fill this need by assembling a complete collection of scholarly articles--Meditation: Classic and Contemporary Perspectives.

From an academic rather than a popular vantage, the volume takes the claims and counterclaims about meditation to a deeper analytical level by including studies from clinical psychology and psychiatry, neuroscience, psychophysiology, and biochemistry. Each selection is a contribution to the field, either as a classic of research, or by being methodologically elegant, heuristically interesting, or creative. Original articles cover such topics as the effects of meditation in the treatment of stress, hypertension, and addictions; the comparison of meditation with other self-regulation strategies; the adverse effects of meditation; and meditation-induced altered states of consciousness.

Concluding with a major bibliography of related works, Meditation offers the reader a valuable overview of the state and possible future directions of meditation research. Today, in the popular media and elsewhere, debate continues: Is meditation an effective technique for spiritual and physical healing, or is it quackery? Meditation: Classic and Contemporary Perspectives weighs in on this debate by presenting what continues to be the most complete collection of scholarly articles ever amassed on the subject of meditation.

part II|312 pages

The Psychology of Meditation

part B|147 pages

Meditation as a Clinical Self-Regulation Strategy

part B5|23 pages

Additional Findings: Normal Subjects

part C|142 pages

Meditation as Altered States of Consciousness

part C2|98 pages

Experiences During Meditation

part III|171 pages

Physiology of Meditation

part B|58 pages

General Metabolic and Autonomic Changes

part C|52 pages

Electroencephalographic Changes

part IV|133 pages

Additional Developments in Clinical and Research Aspects of Meditation

part C|85 pages

Comparison with Other Self-Regulation Strategies

part VI|4 pages

Epilogue

chapter |2 pages

Epilogue