Document Type
Article
Department
Community and Global Health (CGU)
Publication Date
2008
Disciplines
Arts and Humanities | Community Health | Community Health and Preventive Medicine | Medicine and Health Sciences | Mental and Social Health | Philosophy | Public Health
Abstract
Zen students described their experiences when working with koans, and a phenomenological method was used to identify the structure of those experiences. Zen koans are statements or stories developed in China and Japan by Zen masters in order to help students transform their conscious awareness of the world. Eight participants including 3 females and 5 males from Southern California with 1 to 30 years of experience in Zen answered open-ended questions about koan practice in one tape-recorded session for each participant. Refl ection yielded the following thematic clusters: (a) motivation, (b) approaches to working with koans, (c) experiences while working with koans, (d) experiences of insight into koans, (e) working with a teacher, and (f ) transformation. Participants described positive transformations including better control of emotions and concentration, better awareness of prejudices and biases with the ability to suppress those types of habitual associations, and a new relation to and acceptance of spiritual questions and doubts.
Rights Information
© 2008 Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden
Terms of Use & License Information
DOI
10.1163/156916208X338774
Recommended Citation
Grenard, Jerry L., "The Phenomenology of Koan Meditation in Zen Buddhism" (2008). CGU Faculty Publications and Research. 143.
https://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgu_fac_pub/143
Included in
Community Health Commons, Community Health and Preventive Medicine Commons, Philosophy Commons