Skip to content
Currents Home

By JCS Editor – October 18, 2024

  • Events
3 min read

Contemplative Studies Panels at AAR Conference

November 23-26, 2024

Currents Home

By JCS Editor – October 18, 2024

  • Events
3 min read

Contemplative Studies Panels at AAR Conference

November 23-26, 2024

The Contemplative Studies Unit at the American Academy of Religion is sponsoring three panels at the annual conference in San Diego, CA from November 23-26, 2024:

Confucian Contemplation: Historical Landscape and Contemporary Significance. Saturday, 12:30 PM – 2:30 PM. Convention Center-6F (Upper Level West)

Confucian contemplation, particularly quiet-sitting meditation, has been historically overlooked in contemplative studies. This is despite its deep integration in Confucian traditions, where figures like Cheng Yi and Yang Shi viewed it as crucial for moral self-cultivation and active engagement with the world. Zhu Xi’s evolving stance further illuminated its philosophical depth. The underrepresentation is partly due to the practice’s societal integration, the absence of texts with detailed techniques, and the scholarly necessity to reinterpret and recontextualize these traditions after their decline in modern times.The papers session advocates for including the Ruist perspective in global research, noting its potential relevance to modern professionals akin to ancient Ru scholars. It includes papers exploring early Chinese ritual fasting, the philosophical dimensions of quiet-sitting in the lineage of pattern-principle learning, Zhu Xi’s meditation interpreted through a Chinese Catholic lens, and the efficacy of Confucian practices in contemporary pedagogy of liberal arts.

Presiding
Anna Sun, Duke University

Panelists
Christopher Yang, Brown University
Ritual Fasting and Inner Cultivation in Early China

Bin Song, Washington College
Quiet-Sitting Meditation: A Philosophical Practice in Cheng-Zhu Learning of Pattern-Principle

John Pino, Harvard University
Rereading Zhu Xi’s Quiet-Sitting Practice through a Chinese Catholic Lens

Judson Murray, Capital University
Confucian Contemplation and Experiential Learning

Responding
Jea Sophia Oh, West Chester University

Meditation as Sickness, Meditation as Medicine. Sunday, 9:00 AM – 11:00 AM. Convention Center-11B (Upper Level West) 

The panel examines how Buddhist meditation instructors and practitioners interpret, respond to, and manage the potential challenges of meditative practice. The panel adopts an interdisciplinary approach, analyzing the complex nature of meditation from religious, cultural, historical, psychological, and gender perspectives. Six panelists examine meditation-related health concerns experienced by lay and monastic Buddhists in different geographical areas, including Tibet, Nepal, Taiwan, the United States, Burma, and Thailand. Their combined efforts reveal the intricate nature of meditation, highlighting its connections not only to individual experiences but also to larger institutional frameworks. The discussion makes a significant contribution to the exploration of strategies for preventing, alleviating, and effectively managing potential challenges that may arise from meditation practice. By highlighting the limitations of a one-size-fits-all approach in meditation research and practice, it advocates for a more nuanced and culturally sensitive methodology in contemplative studies, Buddhist studies, and religious studies.

Presiding
C. Pierce Salguero, Pennsylvania State University

Panelists
Michael Sheehy, University of Virginia
Meditation as Medicine: Tibetan Buddhist Contemplative Practices for Health and Wellbeing 

Ira Helderman, Vanderbilt University
A Clinician’s View from Contemporary Nepal: Interviews with Dr. Pawan Sharma

Dixuan Yujing Chen, Grinnell College
Shengyan’s Views on Meditation Sickness within the Han Chinese Buddhist Context 

Kin Cheung, Moravian University
Deviation from Proper Chinese Self-Cultivation or Spiritual Practices: Interview with a Contemporary Teacher of Martial Arts, Qigong, and Buddhist Healing

Daniel M. Stuart, College of Arts and Sciences, University of South Carolina
Healing Meditation and Meditation Sickness: The Strategies of Sayagyi U Ba Khin (1899–1971)

Daphne Weber, Washington State University
Meditation Sickness as Gendered Karmic Consequence: An Analysis of Thai Female Monastic’s Adverse Meditation Experiences

Responding
James A. Benn, McMaster University

What do we mean by Meditation? Sunday, 5:00 PM – 6:30 PM. Convention Center-7B (Upper Level West).

These papers offer engaging new discourse on contemplative praxis as a means of teasing out precisely what we mean when we discuss practices like meditation. The first paper addresses meditation praxis within a historical Tibetan context by examining the healing effects of  praxis within the context of the use of sound in the Unimpeded Sound Tantra (Sgra thal ‘gyur). The second paper in this panel draws from the writings of Tsongkhapa (1357-1419), (Gampopa (1079-1153) and Longchen pa (1308-1363) to discuss the Tibetan practice, thukdam, where the body of an advanced Tibetan practitioner exhibits signs of though clinically dead. The third paper offers an analysis of meditation practice through two different lenses, one derived from a religious context and one that exhibits something more akin to a technological reading of meditation praxis.

Presiding
Loriliai Biernacki, University of Colorado

Panelists
Devin Zuckerman, University of Virginia
Healing the Body, Speech, and Mind: A Model of Buddhist Contemplative Medicine in the Unimpeded Sound Tantra (Sgra thal ‘gyur)

Tenzin Bhuchung, Princeton University
Contemplative Practices involved in Thukdam: A Post-Clinical Death Meditation Observed Among Certain Tibetan monks

Luca Del Deo, Harvard University
Unveiling the Dual Technological and Cultural Identities of Meditation

Responding
Loriliai Biernacki, University of Colorado

Michael Sheehy, University of Virginia

Search

Subscribe

to updates through the Contemplative Forum.

Highlight

Contemplation +
What is Contemplation?

Filters

All Posts
Announcements
Articles
Events
Interviews
Op-Eds
Proceedings
Reviews
Special Issues

Submit

to Contemplative Currents.

Contemplative Currents

Related Posts

  • JCS Editor • August 29, 2025

    Special Issue Announcement

    Special Issue #08

    The JCS Editors are delighted to announce Special Issue #08: Contemplation in Education and Human Development with guest editors Robert W. Roeser (Emory University), Brendan Ozawa-de Silva (Emory University), Yuki Imoto (Keio University), and Kimberly Schonert-Reichl (University of Illinois, Chicago)….
  • JCS Editor • August 15, 2025

    Contemplation + Leadership

    An Interview With Ian H. Solomon

    JCS: Thanks for joining us for this series called Contemplation Plus. What we’re interested in is contemplation and its myriad of expressions. It’s about contemplation and whatever that means to you at the intersection of an area that is the…
  • JCS Editor • July 31, 2025

    Special Issue Announcement

    Special Issue #7

    The JCS Editors are excited to announce Special Issue #07: Micro-Phenomenology, Heart Openings, and Contemplative Practice with guest editors Christian Suhr and Martijn van Beek. In recent years, micro-phenomenological interviews have been used across a range of disciplines to understand the rich textures of human experience,…

Related Posts

  • JCS Editor • March 27, 2025

    Call for Submissions

    ISCR Conference 2025

    Abstracts and Proposals Due April 30th, 2025 The 3rd Conference of the International Society for Contemplative Research (ISCR) will be held on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill from November 3-6, 2025. The ISCR 2025 Conference is…
    Read more
  • Ame Wren • January 9, 2025

    Sharath Jois

    The Active Series

    On November 8, 2024, the Contemplative Sciences Center hosted teacher, practitioner, and lineage holder of Ashtanga yoga, Sharath Jois, for an event revealing his new series, The Active Series, and accompanying book by the same name. The event was cohosted…
    Read more
  • JCS Editor • November 16, 2023

    ISCR 2nd Annual Conference

    The International Society for Contemplative Research is holding their 2nd annual conference in Padova, Italy from June 19 – 23, 2024. The deadline to submit abstracts is January 31, 2024. Please visit www.iscrconference.org or email admin@contemplativeresearch.org for more details.
    Read more
  • Currents
  • Contact Us
  • Subscribe

Connect with us on social media

Instagram
Facebook

Copyright © 2025
Images credits


Published by the Contemplative Sciences Center at the University of Virginia
JCS ISSN: 3066-9030

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.