Exploring tranquility: Eastern and Western perspectives
Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
Documents
- Christoffersen VR et al 2022 Exploring tranquility
Final published version, 240 KB, PDF document
Although tranquility is a fundamental aspect of human life, the experiential
nature of tranquility remains elusive. Traditionally, many philosophical,
religious, spiritual, or mystical traditions in East and West have strived to reach
tranquil experiences and produced texts serving as manuals to reach them.
Yet, no attempt has been made to compare experiences of tranquility and
explore what they may have in common. The purpose of this theoretical study
is to explore the experiential nature of tranquility. First, we present examples
of what we consider some of the most central experiences of tranquility
in Eastern and Western traditions. For the sake of simplicity, we sort these
examples into four categories based on their experiential focus: the body,
emotions, the mind, and mysticism. Second, we offer an exploratory account
of tranquility, arguing that the different examples of tranquility seem to share
certain experiential features. More specifically, we propose that the shared
features pertain both to the content or quality of the tranquil experiences,
which involves a sense of presence and inner peace, and to the structure
of these experiences, which seems to involve some degree of detachment
and absorption.
nature of tranquility remains elusive. Traditionally, many philosophical,
religious, spiritual, or mystical traditions in East and West have strived to reach
tranquil experiences and produced texts serving as manuals to reach them.
Yet, no attempt has been made to compare experiences of tranquility and
explore what they may have in common. The purpose of this theoretical study
is to explore the experiential nature of tranquility. First, we present examples
of what we consider some of the most central experiences of tranquility
in Eastern and Western traditions. For the sake of simplicity, we sort these
examples into four categories based on their experiential focus: the body,
emotions, the mind, and mysticism. Second, we offer an exploratory account
of tranquility, arguing that the different examples of tranquility seem to share
certain experiential features. More specifically, we propose that the shared
features pertain both to the content or quality of the tranquil experiences,
which involves a sense of presence and inner peace, and to the structure
of these experiences, which seems to involve some degree of detachment
and absorption.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Article number | 931827 |
Journal | Frontiers in Psychology |
Volume | 13 |
Number of pages | 9 |
ISSN | 1664-1078 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Aug 2022 |
Number of downloads are based on statistics from Google Scholar and www.ku.dk
No data available
ID: 317084638