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By JCS Editor – December 30, 2024

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Special Issue Article

No Attainment, Nothing to Attain: A Buddhist Reflection on Psychedelics

Peter D. Hershock is an intercultural philosopher and Director of the Asian Studies Development Program at the East-West Center in Honolulu. He is the author or editor of more than a dozen books, most recently: Buddhism and Intelligent Technology: Toward a More Humane Future and Consciousness Mattering: A Buddhist Synthesis.

Currents Home

By JCS Editor – December 30, 2024

  • Announcements
  • Articles
Quick read

Special Issue Article

No Attainment, Nothing to Attain: A Buddhist Reflection on Psychedelics

Peter D. Hershock is an intercultural philosopher and Director of the Asian Studies Development Program at the East-West Center in Honolulu. He is the author or editor of more than a dozen books, most recently: Buddhism and Intelligent Technology: Toward a More Humane Future and Consciousness Mattering: A Buddhist Synthesis.

“No Attainment, Nothing to Attain: A Buddhist Reflection on Psychedelics” by Peter D. Hershock is a part of Special Issue 1: Psychedelics, Contemplation, and Religion, Guest edited by Daniel A. Hirshberg and Stuart Ray Sarbacker.

Abstract: The religious or spiritual value of contemplative practices and the use of psychedelics is not intrinsic to experiences obtained through them and is instead relational—a function of how they alter consciousness. In support of that claim, I first present a nonreductive, nondualist Buddhist account of consciousness that calls critically into question the merits of both physicalist and phenomenalist reductionism in exploring the meditative and psychedelic alterations of consciousness. I then make a Buddhist case for seeing that changes in subjective experience are at best provisional goals of these alterations, and not their ultimate aim: elaborating increasingly liberating and compassionately virtuosic relations. I turn finally to recent neuroscientific studies of psychedelics and meditation that combine first-person and third-person methodologies to draw some challenging inferences regarding the dynamics of contemplative practice, the reality of interpersonal realization, the merits of group practice, the liabilities of individualist conceptions of liberal autonomy, and the inadequacy of meditative techniques like mindfulness practice stripped of dharmic content and context.

Keywords: Buddhism, consciousness, karma, meditation, neuroscience, nondualism, psychedelic experience, relationality

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DOI: https://doi.org/10.57010/PMJX1418

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