This meaning, the author
holds, might best be characterized as “lucid awareness.” He questions the common
explanation of mindfulness as “bare attention,” pointing out problems that lurk behind
both words in this expression.
You can also listen to Jonathan Nelson read the paper aloud on YouTube if you prefer.
About: Mindfulness Buddhist Meditation
Published in 2013 in “Mindfulness: Diverse Perspectives on its Meaning, Origins and Applications” (J. Mark G. Williams and Jon Kabat-Zinn ed.) by Routledge, New York.
Bibtex Data
@inproceedings{ bodhi2013-what-does-mindfulness-mean,
title={{ W} hat { D} oes { M} indfulness { R} eally { M} ean?: { A} { C} anonical { P} erspective} ,
author={ Bhikkhu Bodhi} ,
booktitle={ Mindfulness: Diverse Perspectives on its Meaning, Origins and Applications} ,
editor={ J. Mark G. Williams and Jon Kabat-Zinn} ,
publisher={ Routledge} ,
address={ New York} ,
year=2013,
pages={ 19--38} ,
chapter=1,
keywords={ sati,meditation,academic} ,
doi={ 10.1080/14639947.2011.564813} ,
ranking={ rank4} ,
url={ https://ibc-elibrary.thanhsiang.org/files/public/01_ mindfulness_ canonical_ bhikku_ bodhi.pdf}
}
Copy to clipboard
View this entry's source code on GitHub