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(2014) After mindfulness, Dordrecht, Springer.

The everyday sublime

Stephen Batchelor

pp. 37-48

Meditation originates and culminates in the everyday sublime. I have little interest in achieving states of sustained concentration in which the sensory richness of experience is replaced by pure introspective rapture. I have no interest in reciting mantras, visualizing Buddhas or mandalas, gaining out-of-body experiences, reading other people's thoughts, practicing lucid dreaming, channelling psychic energies through chakras, let alone absorbing my consciousness in the transcendent perfection of the Unconditioned. Meditation is about embracing what is happening to this organism as it touches its environment in this moment. I do not reject the experience of the mystical. I only reject the view that the mystical is concealed behind what is merely apparent, that it is anything other than what is occurring in time and space right now. The mystical does not transcend the world, but saturates it. "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical" noted Wittgenstein in 1961, "but that it exists' (1961: 88).

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9781137370402_3

Full citation:

Batchelor, S. (2014)., The everyday sublime, in M. Bazzano (ed.), After mindfulness, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 37-48.

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