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The Science of Meditation: How to Change Your Brain, Mind and Body Paperback – September 6, 2018
by Richard Goleman, Daniel, Davidson (Author)
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Publisher : Penguin Life (September 6, 2018)
Language : English
ISBN-10 : 0241975697
ISBN-13 : 978-0241975695
Item Weight : 8.3 ounces
Dimensions : 5.08 x 0.79 x 7.8 inches
Best Sellers Rank: #107,557 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
Customer Reviews:
4.3 out of 5 stars 174 ratings
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Elvis Manson
5.0 out of 5 stars WowzaReviewed in the United States on December 7, 2021
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After I read this I went through a portal and became a celestial being.
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Luis Ortiz
5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente libro!Reviewed in the United States on March 30, 2021
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Desde el punto de vista espiritual es muy racional, no dogmático, y desde le punto de vita científico, es muy esperanzador.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Scientifically rigorous yet fun to readReviewed in the United States on November 4, 2017
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It lives up to its title - it's a well written review of the scientific literature yet easy to understand. The accomplished authors, while describing their experiences meditating in the East, will take you on adventures to strange lands and traditions. Scientifically rigorous yet fun to read. Hard to beat.
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Steve Mays
3.0 out of 5 stars Three StarsReviewed in the United States on January 11, 2018
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Okay but not the best treatment of this subject.
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Bernie GourleyTop Contributor: Fantasy Books
5.0 out of 5 stars A critical look at the science of meditation and the long-term changes that resultReviewed in the United States on November 5, 2019
This book has been sold under the title listed above as well as the less prosaic title, “Altered Traits.” The switch may represent a lack of confidence that the coined term “altered traits” would catch on, and / or a desire to market the book as broadly as possible.
“Altered Traits” is a play on the more well-known term “altered states [of consciousness.]” The idea being that meditation (as well as many other activities from consuming psychoactive drugs to having a shamanistic drum rave) create a change from the ordinary waking state of consciousness, but what the authors wanted to focus more upon is the long-term and sustained changes that result from extended meditation practice. (Hence, coining the term “altered traits.”) These sustained changes are a prevalent theme through out the book. This makes sense as one of the co-authors, Richard Davidson, is well-known for investigating the brains and brain activity of monks and yogis with extremely advanced practices (tens of thousands of hours in meditation.) Still, the prosaic title, “The Science of Meditation,” may make more than marketing sense because the book does discuss the scientific research on meditation pretty broadly.
Both Goleman and Davidson are long time meditators as well as being subject matter experts in psychology and brain science. This is a major strength of the book. Some scientists are dismissive of practices that have origins in spiritual practices and have blindsides or are prone to oversimplifications because of that bias. On the other hand, that bias isn’t helped by the fact that meditation experts often oversell meditation as a practice that will do everything from spontaneously cure your cancer to allow you to levitate six feet in the air. The authors of this book aren’t afraid to call out such spurious claims, but aren’t dismissive of practices of religious or spiritual origin. The authors also spend a fair amount of time criticizing past scientific investigations of meditation (including their own) on the basis of naivete about the nature of the practices. A major problem has always been an “apples and oranges” grouping together of practices that are different in potentially important ways. There have also been all the problems that plague other disciplines as well (small sample size, poor methodology, etc.) These discussions won’t mean much to most readers, but are helpful to those who want a better idea which studies are gold standard and which are weak. That said, the book doesn’t get bogged down in technical issues.
The book opens by laying out some of the important differences between various meditation practices and trying to educate readers who may either not know much about meditation or may know it only from the perspective of a single discipline. Goleman and Davidson suggest one way of thinking about different kinds of meditation is in terms of “the deep and the wide.” The former being sectarian practitioners who practice specific ritualized practices in an intense way. The latter being more secular practitioners whose practices may borrow from different domains. They present a more extensive classification scheme than this simple bifurcation, making it more of a continuum. Later in the book, they consider ways in which practices might be categorized (e.g. Attentional, Constructive, and Deconstructive) but it’s emphasized that there isn’t currently an agreed upon schema.
Throughout the book, one gets stories of the authors experience in investigating this subject. This included trying to get monks to allow themselves to be studied, even with a letter from the Dalai Lama. It also covers the challenge of trying to build interest in the subject in an academic setting that once thought of meditation as little more than voodoo.
The middle portion of the book has a number of chapters that address particular types of practices and the specific effects they have (and haven’t) been found to have. These include developing a more compassionate outlook and behavior (ch. 6), improved attention (ch. 7), negation of pain and physical ailments (ch. 8 & 9), and meditation / mindfulness as part of a psychotherapeutic approach. The authors repeatedly point out that these practices were never intended for the purpose of treating ailments (mental or physical,) though they do seem to show benefits in a number of domains outside of what the spiritual seekers who brought them to prominence intended of them.
The chapters toward the book’s end focus heavily on investigations into advanced meditators, and the altered traits and brain changes seen in them.
There are few graphics in the book, but it’s annotated and has an “additional resources” section in the back.
I’d highly recommend this book. The authors’ mixed background gives them a good vantage point to provide an overview of the subject, and also allows them to tap into stories of their experiences which make the book more interesting than it otherwise would be.
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AndrewC
1.0 out of 5 stars An unscientific review of the science... disappointing.Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 4, 2018
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For anyone used to reading critical reviews of scientific literature this book is a disappointment. Despite stating their intent in early chapters to survey the science regarding meditation practices there is chapter after chapter of uncritical presentation of qualitative summaries of studies with only brief lip service paid to critical appraisal of the conduct of the studies, or the robustness of the science. The authors are clearly both convinced of the benefits of practice, which is not in itself a bad thing, but they appear to have made very little effort to take a genuinely objective view of the evidence of benefit in this book.
The paragraph which prompted me to write this somewhat scathing review was one where they cited, again uncritically, a study showing long term meditators had lower respiratory rates than non-meditators... and that the number translated to “more than 2000 extra breaths a day for the nonmeditators- and more than 800,000 breaths over the course of a year. These extra breaths are physiologically taxing, and can extract a health toll as time goes on.” What?! Really?! Not surprisingly there is no citation offered for this statement... what credulous nonsense!
I will read on, but with a heavy heart. There is a need for a digestible critical review of the cumulative science surrounding mental practices, and its relevance or otherwise for health and well-being, but I am afraid this is not it.
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timthefluter
5.0 out of 5 stars Gently inspiringReviewed in the United Kingdom on July 21, 2018
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When I type 'Altered Traits' in Amazon, I'm taken to a book called 'The Science of Meditation', but I can find nothing that says that the book is published under 2 different names. I'm reading it anyway, and it is a gently inspiring reminder of the value of regular practice, as well as a useful source of research findings presented in a delightfully accessible way.
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B
5.0 out of 5 stars A hugely important book, particularly for meditatorsReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 24, 2018
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This is such an important book. Fascinating in it's own right but also hugely insightful for current meditators. The authors should be congratulated for the quality of their lifelong work. I really hope this book gets revised many times over the coming years as the research continues.
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JK Palmer
5.0 out of 5 stars OutstandingReviewed in the United Kingdom on November 26, 2018
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Written by the guys who did the research on meditation, this book discusses what science knows about how meditation is not simply about altered states of consciousness, but has the capacity to alter traits in character. If you are interested in meditation, mindfulness or simply growing up as a human being get this.
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BlueBrain
4.0 out of 5 stars Marvellous, but read with caution..read with mindfulnessReviewed in India on February 19, 2021
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Without a pinch of doubt, I will call his book among the essential books for your spiritual and personal growth. But a lot of it depends upon your filtering capacity and maturity also, as the book is pressing enough to even convert you to Buddhism or buy a Jon kabat Zin's or even authors' own Mindfulness classes.
Why this book is so important. Because it is one of few rare books, and perhaps one the recently most emerging books which carries scientific validation of meditation, talks science and deepens your trust in meditation and its practises which our sages preached for millenniums and which waste always discarded as junk or bogus. The Science of today has now advanced and matured at least that much enough to carry out some reasonable experimental validations on meditation and spiritualism. Unfortunately, our own very scientists are beign forced to end up justifying gobar and urine of cow, while west is taking up the job which actually we should have done. Thanks to the fractured gvt policies and pathetic state of science and its funding due to idiots running nation who know how to sell name of Raam to garner votes, but have not an inch of respect and vision towards Raam and our rich history.
This book will compell you to believe in meditations and power of spiritualism without an inch of doubt. Lots of cases of scientific tests and proofs have been provided. But its a big trap also. Why?
This book is a shrewed attempt to convert you to buddhism. Mind it, who r the authors? Accomlished pschology and brain scientists and writers with basic training in buddhist schools. They are so much capable that they will transform you and you will not know. I just sum up the things which made me alert of the authors and their intentions while reading this books:
1) Without an inch of doubt meditation has roots much before Buddha. More than 120 meditation styles and they ways have been described in Vigyan Bhairav Trantra. Buddha picked just one of them, meditating on breath. Nowhere authors describe this and portrays as if breathing based mindfulness belonged to Buddha and started from there. While fact is that Buddha just picked one of those hundred ways given by traditional hindu meditation system. I respect Buddha, consider him Hindu who picked his choice of leaf from the booklets of hinduism, and the buddhist way of rejuvenating spiritualism.
2) On Vipassana meditation, SN Goenka who is considered as an authority, made it clear in this book that he does not believe in conversion of religion, and perhaps did not even beleive in such things and his none of trainings should be taken like that. Nowhere you find such attempt made by the authors.
3) In entire book, you will find references to several buddhist monks, but hardly 1 or 2 hindu saints, while meditation was given birth basically by them, and even Buddha stands as their follower. Just snap through the index of the book and you will find the exact values of names and references.
4) The height of thanklessness of the authors crossed the limits when they credit Job Kabath Zin for visualization based practises, whcih is called Yog Nidra, and no where in the book these guys mention the real father of Yognidra...Swami Satyananda Paramhansa. Not a single place him was referred. And not to forget, when the authors were doing their Masters degree, Satyananda was giving training of Yoganidra in Japanese jails for transformation of hardened criminals, with full scientific records and research. Strange is the shamelessness of westerns like these authors who credit Yognidra to a kid like Jon Kabbath Zin and their own programme, and totally ignore the real fathers of these mediation techniques. Such blatant attempt of credits can be made as end of the day these guys r westerners, people full of greed and eying everything as business. Thank our saints who did not bother even for these things. Otherwise in contemprory world a legal case could have been made on these authors and Jon Kabbath Zen for claiming what they call their creation!
So, read this book carefully. A week minded person will always be swept away with wrong credits. truths are there, but fractured. Be careful. Buddha was great, respect him as a teacher, but a fact remains that he was also one of the students of grand hinduism and used its trainings to develop his own path. Yes, off late corruption in hinduism costed all, including torture of buddhism. But that does not mean you start calling that counting started from 50, not from 1 or zero!
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The Science of Meditation: How to Change Your Brain, Mind and Body
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The Science of Meditation: How to Change Your Brain, Mind and Body
by Daniel Goleman (Goodreads Author), Richard J. Davidson
3.91 · Rating details · 3,673 ratings · 422 reviews
More than forty years ago, two friends and collaborators at Harvard, Daniel Goleman and Richard Davidson were unusual in arguing for the benefits of meditation. Now, as mindfulness and other brands of meditation become ever more popular, promising to fix everything from our weight to our relationship to our professional career, these two bestselling authors sweep away the
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Published September 7th 2017 by Penguin Life (first published September 5th 2017)
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I'm 10 pages into the book and very interested in the content, but I'm feeling a little put off by the sense of the authors tooting their own horns about their histories in the field, and perhaps airing out old grievances against the old establishment that discouraged their research. Those who have read it: am I alone in this negative vibe, and is it worth getting over my feeling and reading the rest of the book?
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David Laing I got the same vibe in those early sections. I'm still midway through, but it definitely picks up at around chapter 4.(less)
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Leland Beaumont
Jul 27, 2017Leland Beaumont rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Two giants of science journalism and neuroscience research, Daniel Goleman and Richard Davidson, collaborate to separate fact from folklore about the benefits of mediation in this important, factually intensive, and readable book. Their research has been guided by the idea that: “Some of what you know about meditation may be wrong. But what is true about meditation you may not know.”
Fair warning to hippies and new age practitioners; this is a well-researched book about science.
In 1970 Dan travelled to Bodh Gaya India where he met an elderly Tibetan monk, Khunu Lama. Dan was so impressed by the monk’s attentive, peaceful, and compassionate qualities that he returned to India later that year and studied with the esteemed Maharaji Neen Karoli Baba.
Three years later at Dan’s encouragement, Richie and his wife Susan traveled to Dalhousie India for a ten-day meditation retreat with S. N. Goenka, a teacher with whom Dan had earlier studied. By the third day of the retreat Richie had learned to overcome intense pain through mental discipline. He became convinced that powerful methods that transform minds in healthy directions could be learned.
While both were Harvard University students in the early 1970s, they shared an interest in meditation. Despite sober warnings from their advisers to resist the lure of mysticism and avoid the career ending path followed earlier by Timothy Leary, they both chose to study meditation-related topics for their Ph.D. dissertations. They have been good friends and life-long collaborators in the practice of meditation and scientific study of contemplative science ever since.
During the several decades of their collaborations, these researchers have debunked the false claims of charlatans while scientifically confirming the surprising yet subjective reports of many skilled meditators. Their collaborations have engaged: Ram Dass, Krishna Das, Jon Kabat-Zinn, Matthieu Ricard, Mingyur Rinpoche, and the Dalai Lama.
The varieties of contemplative practices described collectively as meditation rival the wide range of athletic activities described collectively as sport. These include: mindfulness, compassion, attention, insight, loving-kindness, monitoring thoughts, deconstructing and reappraising pain, integrating experiences, and other methods and outcomes. They recognized the importance of clearly differentiating among these varieties of mediation to allow careful study.
They continually improved research methods, including: determining the total lifetime hours of meditation practice of each person studied, use of comparison conditions by the control groups in each experiment, rigorous operational definitions of mindfulness, and other experimental disciplines. They dismissed studies that did not meet their strict standards for scientific research so they could to draw more reliable conclusions.
As suggested by the book’s title, they emphasized the distinction between short lived mental states and enduring mental and physical traits. They recognized that “After the high goes, you’re still the same schmuck you were before.” They endeavored to study extremely positive altered traits. “It is not the highs that matter. It is who you become.”
Many chapters end with a concise summary of the key findings of the chapter conveniently presented “In a Nutshell”. These findings include: 1) experienced Zen practitioners can withstand higher levels of pain, and have less reaction to pain, 2) loving-kindness meditation increases the likelihood practitioners will provide help to those in need, 3) as little as ten hours of mindfulness meditation over a two-week period strengthened attention and working memory, 4) long-term practitioners can deconstruct the default narrative we interpret as our “self”, 5) mindfulness training can decrease production of cytokines—the molecules responsible for inflammation, and 6) combinations of mindfulness and cognative therapy are well-validated treatments for some mental disorders. While meditating on empathy a yogi master with a remarkable 62,000 hours of mediation practice was able increase his EEG signature of empathy by 700 to 800 percent compared his levels at rest. Gamma wave EEG activity, which occurs for only a few seconds when novices attain a satisfying “A Ha” insight, can be sustained for minutes at a time by the most experienced yogis.
As research continues, the authors are enthused by the possibility of validating attainment of many positive altered traits. These include: generosity, ethical conduct, patience, concentration, wisdom, and others. The authors boldly envision a world where “… by transforming our minds we could improve not only our own health and well-being but also those of our communities and the wider world.”
The book ends with a helpful list of resources for the study and practice of mediation and extensive reference notes.
This important book is well researched, well argued, and well written. Sound arguments based on valid logic and representative evidence are presented with a narrative flair resulting in an enjoyable read. Interesting stories and rigorous research meld into this readable and authoritative treatment of an important and enduring topic.
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David Rubenstein
Aug 31, 2019David Rubenstein rated it liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: science, psychology, self-help
I have some mixed feelings about this book. I loved Daniel Goleman's book Emotional Intelligence: Why It Can Matter More Than IQ, so I thought this one would be equally good. This book about meditation is very informative. But it is not as much about meditation as about research on meditation. Let me explain.
Goleman emphasizes that although there has been a ton of research investigations into the benefits (or non-benefits) of meditation, most scientific studies are frighteningly deficient. Researchers often do not understand meditation or the range and variety of different meditation techniques. Moreover, it is difficult to conduct a good, controlled experiment. And a double-blind experiment is near impossible.
A minimal amount of meditation yields some short-term effects. But long-term, lasting benefits require long-term meditation with specialized approaches. Highly experienced meditators suffer less inflammation associated with stress. Meditation can lower blood pressure. Practicing mindfulness can increase the production of telomerase, an enzyme that can slow down the aging process. While meditation can slow down atrophy of the brain as we age, studies so far do not distinguish between the many kinds of meditation.
Short training classes in mindfulness sessions does improve attention and focus, but the improvements do not last without continuing practice. In a controlled experiment, Zen meditators responded to pain as if it was a more neutral sensation. They also recovered from various types of stresses than non-meditators. But they meditated for many hours over a period of months.
The most interesting discovery described in this book, is that when someone is "doing nothing", there are parts of the brain that are activated, and these parts become deactivated when moving to a highly demanding cognitive task. This finding is very anti-intuitive. Perhaps the reason is that when you are doing "nothing", you are subconsciously ruminating, trying to solve problems.
This is not really a self-help book. There is no guide to how to meditate. But there is a lot of discussion about the many types of meditation, and each type has its own specific benefits. The writing is clear, but to my mind rather dry. If you are doing research on meditation, then this book is a must-read. And, the book makes it clear, if you want to be really serious about learning how to meditation, get a good teacher. (less)
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Sanjeev
Sep 08, 2017Sanjeev rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Even though we evolved from Homo erectus more than 1.8 million years ago, our radar system for existential threats is still overactive and keeps sounding false alarms for flight and fight - causing distress to self and others. Look at President Trump: all the power, wealth, beautiful women - but the man is always pissed off. Distresses the whole world.
And look at Dalai Lama. Who would you rather be? This book is about how meditation and compassion have made Dalai Lama's brain different from Donald Trump's brain.
Although I read The Meditative Mind: The Varieties of Meditative Experience in early 1990's, for me, Daniel Goleman’s book Emotional Intelligence: Why It Can Matter More Than IQ was life-changing and I have been a fan ever since.
In this book, with his friend and colleague Richard Davidson, they explore the permanent effects on brain of meditation, compassion, loving kindness and mindfulness. They call them Altered Traits. Enormous changes in emotional brain - amygdala; executive brain - pre-frontal cortex; automatic/habit brain - basal ganglia; and reward/self centered brain - nucleus accumbens.
Some of this material was already covered in his earlier book - Destructive Emotions by Daniel Goleman. Many of you may have seen the functional MRI scan images of the happiest man on earth - Matthieu Ricard - from Davidson's lab. Very impressive. Matthieu attributes all that to compassion and altruism. Buddha learnt the power of compassion in 5th century BC. And Francis of Assisi said in 12th century AD "is in giving that we receive".
Dan & Richie trace their introduction to meditation and eastern philosophy in early 1970s, when they were in Harvard with Richard Alpert (Ram Dass) and Jeffrey Kagel (Krishna Das). They all went to India, learnt meditation from Naeem Karoli Baba and SN Goenka and ended up spending their lives in meditation in a variety of ways.
Davidson is best known for his studies on the brains of Tibetan Monks with fMRI and they explore his findings at length. But also cover the works of Tania Singer, Lobsang Tenzin Negi, Amishi Jha, Sara Lazar and others.
Being a long-term meditator with science and medical background, I can see why they get into the nitty gritty of scientific studies with the study design, biases, sample sizes, statistics etc. to establish the reliability or fallacies of research findings. Probably more so because some of the work reported in Destructive Emotions turned out to be non replicable. But for the lay reader, all that makes a dreary read. I read the advance review copy and may be they can tone down technical intricacies in the final version of the book.
Otherwise, it is another great book from Goleman that has the potential to be life changing for some. Especially when you find out the monumental effects of compassion on brain. And if that inspires you to sprinkle a little of that compassion in your daily life, wouldn't that make the world a better place?
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Abhiram Moturi
Jan 11, 2018Abhiram Moturi rated it did not like it · review of another edition
meh. The idea to study the effects of meditation is great. But there is no real takeaway from the book. Lots of meditation styles are mentioned and it is not clear what each one is. each chapter touches one aspect that meditation could affect but they mention a bunch of studies and so it loses clarity.
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Vannessa Anderson
Dec 25, 2017Vannessa Anderson rated it did not like it · review of another edition
Shelves: self-help-personal-growth
It was a challenge to stay focus because I just wanted to read about what the titled promised without all the filler.
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Taka
Nov 27, 2017Taka rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: 2017, buddhism-spirituality, 2-nonfiction-you-must-read, popular-science
This book was really timely for me, as, against my better judgment, I was getting a bit frustrated with my progress. Good to know there's hard scientific evidence that progress in meditation roughly follows a dose-response curve (i.e. the more you do it, the better you get). It was instructive to know that different types of meditation have different benefits (and effects on the brain) and reassuring to learn that altered traits take a long time to set in, but they DO set in—it just takes time. Finally, it was simply inspiring to read about the neurophysiology of the "Olympic-level" meditators (Tibetan yogis) who have put in, on average, 27,000 hours of practice, the longest being 62,000 hours (that's 12 hours a day of practice for about 15 years!). Also informative was how Davidson and Goleman divided the expertise of the meditators according to 3 dose-response levels: beginner (up to 1,000h), long-term (between 1,000 and 10,000 hours), and world-class (12,000-62,000h). So my measly 900-1,000 hours of practice puts me on the cusp of the intermediate level, and because some books on meditation (like The Mind Illuminated, sometimes make it seem like a quicker journey than it really is, it was good to know I still have a LONG, LONG way to go (roughly 7-9 more years at the rate I'm practicing to get to the next level). Also good to know was the importance of retreats (the number of which correlated with certain altered traits, like slower breathing and reactivity to stress due to the increase in the prefrontal-amygdala connection).
All in all, good book at the right time. (less)
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Steve
Jan 31, 2018Steve rated it liked it · review of another edition
There’s some good information here, about the scientific examination of various types of meditation and the results. Some of their personal adventures doing research are entertaining, and they honestly criticize mistakes they made as young researchers. But while many important scientific principles are spelled out, the authors also continually bring up tiny un-replicated studies with a few dozen participants as if the results are meaningful. Kind of inconsistent. The whole thing was also a little dumbed-down for my taste. (less)
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Kevin
Oct 17, 2017Kevin rated it liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: psychology, non-fiction, ebook, science
After taking a course about meditation and science I was interested in reading about more scientific evidence on the usefulness of meditation. This book cites many studies and points out studies that were done without rigorous application of the scientific method whose results may be suspect. Balanced and well written.
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Bernie Gourley
Nov 03, 2019Bernie Gourley rated it it was amazing
Shelves: science-mind-body
This book has been sold under the title listed above as well as the less prosaic title, “Altered Traits.” The switch may represent a lack of confidence that the coined term “altered traits” would catch on, and / or a desire to market the book as broadly as possible.
“Altered Traits” is a play on the more well-known term “altered states [of consciousness.]” The idea being that meditation (as well as many other activities from consuming psychoactive drugs to having a shamanistic drum rave) create a change from the ordinary waking state of consciousness, but what the authors wanted to focus more upon is the long-term and sustained changes that result from extended meditation practice. (Hence, coining the term “altered traits.”) These sustained changes are a prevalent theme through out the book. This makes sense as one of the co-authors, Richard Davidson, is well-known for investigating the brains and brain activity of monks and yogis with extremely advanced practices (tens of thousands of hours in meditation.) Still, the prosaic title, “The Science of Meditation,” may make more than marketing sense because the book does discuss the scientific research on meditation pretty broadly.
Both Goleman and Davidson are long time meditators as well as being subject matter experts in psychology and brain science. This is a major strength of the book. Some scientists are dismissive of practices that have origins in spiritual practices and have blindsides or are prone to oversimplifications because of that bias. On the other hand, that bias isn’t helped by the fact that meditation experts often oversell meditation as a practice that will do everything from spontaneously cure your cancer to allow you to levitate six feet in the air. The authors of this book aren’t afraid to call out such spurious claims, but aren’t dismissive of practices of religious or spiritual origin. The authors also spend a fair amount of time criticizing past scientific investigations of meditation (including their own) on the basis of naivete about the nature of the practices. A major problem has always been an “apples and oranges” grouping together of practices that are different in potentially important ways. There have also been all the problems that plague other disciplines as well (small sample size, poor methodology, etc.) These discussions won’t mean much to most readers, but are helpful to those who want a better idea which studies are gold standard and which are weak. That said, the book doesn’t get bogged down in technical issues.
The book opens by laying out some of the important differences between various meditation practices and trying to educate readers who may either not know much about meditation or may know it only from the perspective of a single discipline. Goleman and Davidson suggest one way of thinking about different kinds of meditation is in terms of “the deep and the wide.” The former being sectarian practitioners who practice specific ritualized practices in an intense way. The latter being more secular practitioners whose practices may borrow from different domains. They present a more extensive classification scheme than this simple bifurcation, making it more of a continuum. Later in the book, they consider ways in which practices might be categorized (e.g. Attentional, Constructive, and Deconstructive) but it’s emphasized that there isn’t currently an agreed upon schema.
Throughout the book, one gets stories of the authors experience in investigating this subject. This included trying to get monks to allow themselves to be studied, even with a letter from the Dalai Lama. It also covers the challenge of trying to build interest in the subject in an academic setting that once thought of meditation as little more than voodoo.
The middle portion of the book has a number of chapters that address particular types of practices and the specific effects they have (and haven’t) been found to have. These include developing a more compassionate outlook and behavior (ch. 6), improved attention (ch. 7), negation of pain and physical ailments (ch. 8 & 9), and meditation / mindfulness as part of a psychotherapeutic approach. The authors repeatedly point out that these practices were never intended for the purpose of treating ailments (mental or physical,) though they do seem to show benefits in a number of domains outside of what the spiritual seekers who brought them to prominence intended of them.
The chapters toward the book’s end focus heavily on investigations into advanced meditators, and the altered traits and brain changes seen in them.
There are few graphics in the book, but it’s annotated and has an “additional resources” section in the back.
I’d highly recommend this book. The authors’ mixed background gives them a good vantage point to provide an overview of the subject, and also allows them to tap into stories of their experiences which make the book more interesting than it otherwise would be. (less)
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Kevan Dale
Feb 10, 2018Kevan Dale rated it liked it · review of another edition
While exceedingly well-researched and well-written, I came away somewhat disappointed.
The topic of meditation and what it does in and to the brain is fascinating (being a long-term meditator), but I'm more interested in understanding the results of the latest research than in the processes being used by researchers to get to the results. The authors spend the bulk of the book describing the techniques and evolution of studying meditation (both in their own careers and of others in the field) in the lab. Now, if I were coming at the topic from the perspective of wanting to better understand the challenges and methodologies of research into meditation, I would love this book - it's a gold mine for that.
As it is, I found about 20% of the book terrifically interesting, while the rest only occasionally pulled me in.
Depending on your interests, your mileage may vary. (less)
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Marcel
Jan 13, 2018Marcel rated it liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: meditation
Interesting subject matter but the writing is a bit bland.
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Divyansh Gupta
Mar 22, 2020Divyansh Gupta rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
TLDR; Great review of meditation research, but don't expect a 'how-to' type self help book
This book fully delivers on the promise that its title claims; an explanation of the current scientific understanding of meditation. The most satisfying part about the book is that it holds meditation research to the same high bar as the rest of medicine/biology and does a great job at piercing through the hype generated by poorly designed studies. This is to be expected given that one of the authors (Richie) is the world's foremost authority on neuroscientific research into meditation. Even though the text is rife with study after study of altered states and traits, it never feels too dry, thanks to Dan's effective style of science communication through stories.
What happens in the brain when someone meditates? How do different types of meditation affect the brain? Are there any proven physical or mental health benefits of meditation? How does the brain alter when one accumulates thousands and thousands of hours of meditation practice?
Despite being a great book at answering these questions, there were two things I did not like about the book. First, the subtitle. It is definitely not a 'how to' book by any means. It puzzles me why they chose to market the book this way, especially considering that there are plenty of self-help meditation books and not enough about the science behind it. Second, throughout the book there is an undertone of how meditation apps are just not good enough for serious practice. That may well be true, but in the last chapter the authors reveal that they have co-founded similar apps themselves. It thus seems to send an overall message that 'meditation apps are not that great, unless they come from us'. (less)
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Molecule
Jan 30, 2018Molecule rated it it was amazing
Shelves: favorites, meditation-and-yoga, non-fiction
As a neuroscientist and meditator, I had a great pleasure reading about personal and scientific journeys of Dan and Richie as well as the development of contemplative neuroscience whose pioneers they were. They present current scientific understanding and evaluate research on the topic of meditation through the rigorous scientific lense.
Very well written, with personal stories and insights, vast scientific knowledge and expertise, the book is immensely inspiring to plunge into meditation.
Above ...more
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Ereman
Jul 10, 2018Ereman rated it did not like it · review of another edition
Boring
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R Strange
Jan 13, 2018R Strange rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
This is the book about meditation for those who want the real talk first, and the folklore, philosophy and grand tour later.
Brainwaves were discovered in the 1920s. Up until then, we have relied on descriptions of language to explain changes in state of the mind. Then a little less than a century ago, we began to see the electrical waves of the brain, and it was inevitable that the slow mapping of this miracle of nature would lead us here, to discussing neuroplasticity, or how one might be able to change the physcial structure of the brain. It has been claimed for all written history that it was possible, but only since the EEG have we had a tool to begin measuring these changes as clearly as one writes down the notes to a musical score.
Aha! Now I have a go-to book that I am comfortable recommending to anyone, from any background, about what meditation really is... and what we really know about it on a biological level, using brain imaging technology (which is surprisingly little, but a lot more than even two decades ago). I grew up in a big city and was exposed to a few cultural varieties of lifestyle that included various forms of this practice. I have struggled through life having a clear conversation with those unfamiliar, and have spent some energy trying to express it in simple and clear ways that demystify it, and expose some of the real changes to the way the mind works over prolonged periods of time. Not long ago, I was active on quora in the meditation section, the only area I felt I could answer a little bit from an experienced side... and found the same thing I have often found. People who want to know it through theory before trying it as an action. People who are trying to argue with it, without trying it, because they were told it was a no-no. People from one tradition condemning those of another. Conflicts between teachers, and generally people grasping for big definitions without taking the small steps of physically trying it. I haven't been much of a 'nightstand buddhist' in life, which is more common approach for those who are completely new to even the cultural contexts... people read book after book on the subject. The book Altered Traits is not about promoting any given tradition, not at all. It's about what the brain does when it uses different practices, over different lengths of time. And whether traditional or scientific, it is this, what happens to body and mind, that the rest of the lore and knowledge is built upon.
Anyway, I think the fact that this book says what I've really wanted to say far better than I could, and sparing me the effort now is grand. I think this may be therapeutic in the same way we could use for a number of topics in life these days... instead of hearsay, or having an opinion, or repeating what your tradition says about it... find out what research has been done, on what topics, how well it was done, and how that relates to the physical body. That's what we all have in common. All our bodies are human bodies. Go to the science, find out how it works, how it can be done better, and where the frontier of knowledge is. A refreshing break from opinions, from what you heard or were taught, but at the same time, providing additional insight into the reality and difficulty of research, that opinion nevertheless shapes our questions, and guides what we look for (and what we miss) even in science. Demystifying the delusion that all science is one system of believe or similar bizarre concepts... after all, it is an ethic, that is either well performed, or provides questionable results. Just like there are scientists that work for Big Tobacco and are paid to swear smoking is ideal for olympic athletes... there are all kinds of claims about meditation that will not gain the international recognition of good practice without some actual honest research. It will resolve paradox, allow a spiritual life grounded in useful tools, and permit arguments based on belief to be dissolved in the open light of inquiry.
It is sometimes taught that all paths are one when it comes to meditation, but both traditional knowledge and the research show that different practices have different results, and the amount of time in one's life that has been collected up has really significant, brain changing results, especially in the long term... in particular changes in pain response, expansion of awareness, reduction of anxiety, and loving kindness. It is the best focus on what has been researched I have seen, and really adds a crucial element to the competitive 'spiritual marketplace' that no one sincerely interested in the topic can afford to be unaware of.
Beautifully written, clear and concerned with fairness throughout, and a reminder that we can all change for the better, without any particularly special tools, simply by taking the time for self care. Meditation has done so much for my quality of life, even the endurance of hardships, and it's hard to imagine life without it. So this book is fascinating, for shedding some light on the physical reasons why. (less)
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Sheeraz
Mar 27, 2021Sheeraz rated it really liked it · review of another edition
As I recently started to learn more about meditation, I was curious about any research on the subject. A friend recommended this book, and it's a good overview of some of the evidence of the benefits meditation can provide. I was very skeptical going in given how often the idea of meditation is intermingled with that of the spiritual, crossing over the line of credulity for me. The authors do a good job of separating the two, focusing more on good science and falsifiable predictions. For example, there are studies showing how meditators respond differently to pain (using imaging techniques); studies measuring accuracy of response to a stimulus given distractions; studies investigating meditation as an intervention for depression and so on.
Most of the experiments discussed are well-designed with reasonable control, but there are also a few case studies that need to be taken with a grain of salt (difference in baseline brain gamma waves of meditators withs tens of thousands of hours of practice and a novice). Even with those caveats, there's enough here to convince me of some of the benefits of meditation. If you're thinking about it, but feel doubtful because of the religious underpinnings, give this book a shot. (less)
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Moh. Nasiri
Nov 07, 2018Moh. Nasiri rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: psychology-self-help, audiobook, medicine
Epirical look on meditation and its effect on well being
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Craig Werner
Feb 25, 2018Craig Werner rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: religion-spirituality, psychology, science
The core message of Altered Traits is important: meditation (especially the type known as Mindfulness-Based Stressreduction) can help you, but beware of the hype. Richie Davidson runs the gold standard lab for studying the neuroscience of meditation (at my home institution, the University of Wisconsin-Madison) and he's absolutely rigorous in his approach to the claims made for meditation as a cure for more or less everything. One of the valuable things about Altered Traits is its breakdown of what separates meaningful studies from advertising: control groups and the research design that separates variables are crucial. It's still early in what will be a long-term game; as recently as the late 1970s there were effectively no reliable studies of meditation. But several conclusions seem clear: meditation can help manage stress, deal with chronic pain, slow signs of brain aging, improve attention. It probably can't deal with underlying medical conditions (but it can improve the quality of life for those who have to deal with them.) There are some core ambiguities remaining, one of the most important being that the current studies can't define what impacts come from which type of meditation--mindfulness, loving-kindness meditation, or the more advanced forms practiced by Yogis who have mediated tens of thousands of hours.
But it is clear that meditation, practiced consistently, can transform "states" of being into "traits", states of mind that are present even when you're not meditating.
Altered Traits is deeply grounded in science, but it's not written with a scientific audience in mind. Goleman (a science writer and long-time friend of Davison) describes the scientific issues raised, but provides very little detail on the research, preferring to summarize conclusions. If you want more of the detail, you can find it in Evan Thompson's Waking, Dreaming, Being. (less)
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Magnus Lidbom
May 03, 2019Magnus Lidbom rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: buddhism, spirituality, on_audible, non_fiction, personal_growth, to_reread, psychology, dharma_science, neuroscience, on_kindle
Faith (belief without proof) is unacceptable to me as a basis for important choices. To truly commit to a lifelong meditation practice I need solid evidence that it is worth my time. Personal experience or scientific evidence. Preferably both. The results of my meditation practice so far provides me with the personal experience of early benefits. This book provides the science showing the amazing benefits that long term practice brings.
These two pioneers in the field of contemplative science have sifted out the small percentage of scientific studies on the subject that meet the highest scientific standards. Then they have selected the information that is most relevant to actual meditators and present it in this book.
After reading this book I am more committed than ever before to meditating daily for the rest of my life. If you want to transform yourself into a happier, calmer, better version of yourself you should read this book. It will help dispel those pesky doubt about whether it is really possible, whether you have the ability etc. If you want to know which of the claims about meditation have been scientifically proven and which have not, you should read this book. (less)
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Chandana Watagodakumbura
Oct 27, 2018Chandana Watagodakumbura rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: human-development, mindfulness-practices, educational-neuroscience, brain-and-related-functions, psychology-therapy
“Altered Traits – Science Reveals How Meditation Changes Your Mind, Brain, and Body” by Daniel Goleman (Author of the Bestselling Books on Emotional Intelligence/Psychologist) & Richard Davidson (Research Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry/Director and Founder of Centre for Healthy Minds at the University of Wisconsin-Madison)
“Science operates within a web of culture-bound assumptions that limit our view of what is possible, most powerfully for the behavioural sciences. Modern psychology had known that Eastern systems offer means to transform a person’s very being. When we looked through that alternate Eastern lens, we saw fresh possibilities.”
In “Altered Traits – Science Reveals How Meditation Changes Your Mind, Brain, and Body”, the authors Daniel Goleman (Author of the Bestselling Books on Emotional Intelligence/Psychologist) & Richard Davidson (Research Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry/Director and Founder of Centre for Healthy Minds at the University of Wisconsin-Madison) present hundreds of highly controlled and designed research studies carried out around the world to highlight that various meditation practices can be used to change neural connections in the brain to have positive functional and behavioural impacts on the meditator. They reiterate in the text the need to have long hours of quality practice in the order of thousands especially to have a lasting/trait effect. One of the main aims of the authors is to identify the means of using variants of “deep” meditative practices carried out by long-term, full-time practitioners for the benefits of “wider” masses in developing healthy minds/behaviours and overall well-being.
Two of the common attention related meditative practices are referred to as focused-attention meditation and open-presence/attention/awareness (mindfulness) meditation. In the former, the meditator focuses on a single object such as the breadth while in the latter, he/she attempts to focus on whatever that comes to his/her mind such as an emotion or a thought. In these attention-related practices, the meditator constantly keeps track of his/her attention, and if he/she finds attention wandering, he/she uses that meta-awareness to bring the attention back onto the object of focus. The ability to control our attention and develop meta-awareness is crucial for any learning we do – in fact, the main task of any learning is to get our attention on the object of learning voluntarily. The research listed by the authors have shown that we develop our capacities of cognitive control to select an object and focus (selective attention) in a sustained manner ((by reducing mind wandering). Such sustained attention is shown to enhance our working memories that in turn help in creating lasting/long-term memories. Moreover, the authors highlight a phenomenon known as attentional blink, a measure that helps one to develop sharper attention by identifying differences in a series of objects presented (by reducing attentional blink). Long-term meditators also showed the capacities to focus deeply and fully on the present moments, minimising features such as rumination on the past or future with an inverted V level of attention. Another feature they demonstrated was the effortlessness in the capacities to pay attention to a selected item indicating the use of less brain/cortical resources (or efficient use) for doing it
Another useful and common type of meditation is loving-kindness/compassion meditation. These practices are shown to enhance meditator’s capacities to empathise with others when they are in difficult situations. Also, long-term meditators demonstrated a trait of a higher level of preparedness to help those in need or for engaging in the greater good than the meditators with less number of hours. A higher level of activity was shown in the brain’s radar organ of the amygdala for such preparedness in the long-term meditators (with focused- attention meditation, the amygdala activity was reduced helping to minimise mind wandering). Some empathy-related neural firing was also shown to resonate with other body parts such as the heart validating our longstanding belief of having a “good heart” when we are compassionate. Further, psychological conditions such as kindness, empathy and compassion are shown to minimise the impacts of negative ones such as anger, depression and stress thus enhancing the meditators immune system and overall well-being by minimising proneness to inflammation and unhealthy attachments such as cravings (for examples for some food, alcohol and drugs etc.). Usually, the negative psychological conditions are associated with involvement of the so-called default network/mode/self-system of the brain that becomes activated when one is idling or not focusing on any specific object/function, and this default mode is more prone to focus on negative thoughts/emotions one may possess.
One interesting and surprising observation authors made in their research with long-term meditators was the generation of higher frequency (than normal) gamma waves in the brain during their open presence and compassion meditation activities. The main feature of gamma waves is the ability to synchronise many regions of the brain for highly efficient information processing such as generating insights. Non or novel meditators are also capable of generating gamma waves, but they last only for a fraction of a second while for long-term meditators could have them for minutes. Even more, the long-term meditators showed to have gamma waves generated during their sleep indicating a possible state of “awakening” round the clock. Another observation the authors made in their research was the abilities of long-term meditators have open-presence/attention to whatever that comes to their mind, accomplished possibly by the non-judgemental (without rumination on the past and future) way of paying attention. The authors also highlighted the notions of neuroplasticity and epigenetics they validated from their research. The two phenomena relate the brain’s capacity to change (or develop new neural networks while removing unused ones) based on the experience the individual undergoes. That is, we do not want to keep debating on whether a person’s capabilities are a matter of nature or nurture. The notion of epigenetics relates gene expression made possible by appropriate experiences while suppressing some others when relevant experiences are not present. Further, the text brings to our attention that, open-attention/mindfulness and loving-kindness/compassion meditative practices were successfully used in an evidence-based manner for overcoming/healing depressive disorders and post-traumatic stress disorders (PTSD) respectively.
“The faculty of bringing back a wandering attention over and over again is the very root of judgement, character and will…an education which should improve this faculty would be the education par excellence.” William James – Father of modern psychology
As an educator, I see some great insights emerging from this text. One of the fundamental capabilities we need to develop in learners is to get them to pay attention/focus (for content by reading/seeing, presentations by listening etc.) despite there is a tendency for mind wandering, especially for the contents perceived to be difficult. In other words, we need to encourage learners to persevere in engagement in the content/learning until a clearer understanding is achieved. Learners can also be directed to practice paying attention by asking them to focus on their breathing. Also, learners can be encouraged to practice open presence/attention by being open to whatever that comes to one’s mind through reading/seeing experiencing/hearing in a non-judgemental way with an intrinsic motivation to learn or developing an understanding that such practices help one in lifelong learning, developing a growth mindset, resilience to adverse social/personal situations and overall well-being. Here we highlight the fact that most of our learning is implicit (not explicit/formal as in a classroom or within an institute) and we benefit simply by paying attention/being mindful to our experiences/environments indiscriminately. Reading and journaling can be two prominent areas one can apply open presence/attention at one’s own pace. Loving-kindness/compassion meditation practices are some useful means to develop an understanding or positive feeling of empathy and equanimity. These positive emotions would enable learners to maintain a balanced mental state at an appropriate arousal level in the journey of lifelong learning with a growth mindset.
Finally, we need to commend the authors Daniel Goleman and Richard Davidson for giving the public a gem of an evidence-based resource that can be used in many applications whether as learners, employees or leaders. (less)
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Bakunin
Jul 11, 2019Bakunin rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: spirituality, liberty, self-help, science
This is the book to read if you are wondering what the current science states on meditation and its effect on the brain. It is also the story of the research around meditation and how it has gradually become more popular among scientist. The book does however attempt to dispel false myths about the wonders of meditation.
I was amazed at how they found out about the default mode network. One would think that the brain is less active when not focusing on a task but this turns out not to be true. The brain wanders easily and is actually more active when we are daydreaming (which is most of the time). Meditation trains the mind to be less active and in doing so lowers the stress hormone (cortisol). Another fact which inspires me to keep meditating is that when the scanned the brain of a man who had been meditating all his life (he was in his 40's at the time) they found that his brain was significantly younger than his actual age. The authors divided test subjects into three categories depending on how long they had meditated. The brain of the long term meditator seemed always to be in the now as one would expect and could therefore more easily focus on one task (like counting your breath). There is so much experience in life we miss because we are not paying attention!
As a seasoned meditator I would warn however against trying to measure how far you've come on the spiritual path by counting hours. This varies a lot depending on the individual and how natural you focus is. It seems, at least for my part, that I have only come a short way given the fact that I have been meditating for 2 years and have attended 6 10-day silent retreats. But, as the authors emphasize, practice is what matters. If you keep practicing, results as bound to come as the Vipassana teacher Goenka says. (less)
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Vladimir Slaykovsky
Oct 06, 2018Vladimir Slaykovsky rated it really liked it · review of another edition
All the findings look too good to be 100% true. I wonder if the methodology of studies mentioned in the book was correct
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Illiterate
Mar 29, 2018Illiterate rated it liked it · review of another edition
Good on the science, with attention to its design and reliability. Note: Science leaves open the question, what traits should you cultivate and why?
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George Cove
Feb 13, 2021George Cove rated it liked it
A necessary overview of the scientific journey that meditation research has taken over the last 50 years. A slightly misleading subtitle "How to change your Brain, Mind and Body" - this book certainly is not a self-help book as that might suggest.
For me, it certainly confirmed that a daily meditation practice reaps benefits particularly over the long term and its reassuring that the science backs up my own anecdotal experience. In this sense, it has strengthened my commitment to the path of meditation throughout my life.
I think the book's flow suffered from the burden of having to back every point up with scientific evidence and repetitious descriptions of experiments. I found this meant that the book could actually be quite boring at times. However, i do accept that this is the nature of a scientific overview and that most of this information is both relevant and important to understand. (less)
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Berend
Sep 17, 2019Berend rated it really liked it · review of another edition
A well earned 4 stars. If you're interested in the science and benefits of meditation, and want to know more then this book is a no-brainer. It's quite detailed about what we know, about how meditation works in the brain even up to a neuroscience level, and the history of the meditation science in general. Great reference material full with interesting discoveries, I would say the actual content does outshine the slower parts of the book. If you want to learn how to meditate then this still can be interesting, but it's not a how-to manual.
On the scale from 'story-driven pop science' to 'in-depth technical science' this book is diligently scientific in the best possible way, at least for me as a science-minded lad, while still having interesting story elements to keep you reading. Goleman makes refreshingly nuanced assessments and conclusions, not shying away from the limitations of the science, exactly like you would expect from a scientist involved in this topic since the very start. It was fascinating to read what it does to the brain, how/why it works, and what the current hypotheses are (and where we need more future research).
Going chronologically through the science's history from birth to the now holds the attention well enough as a way of being introduced to all the concepts and slowly adding complexity. How the science of meditation started out with rudimentary brain tools to measure brain waves, from a discipline where researching meditation was actually strongly frowned upon and was even seen as ruining your career because of its spiritual origins. (Also the curious story how meditation research into mind states was also inspired by the psychedelics research in the '60 in the US before they were banned). Then as later the science and understanding grew rapidly with more carefully designed studies and new revolutionary brain imaging technologies such as fMRI.
The main argument of the book, if you keep meditating then its temporary positive effects become more permanent is exciting science to say the least. As a meditator, which has perhaps only meditated a couple of hundred hours, I feel like it has deepened my understanding and appreciation of the practice, next to reinvigorating my motivation to keep at it.
Above all, it confirmed and underscored its importance and value with solid science. From just a few dozens hours of mindfulness meditation leading to measurable improvements, to meditation masters who have a young brain age statistically in the highest percentiles, recovering rapidly from stress and pain and show remarkable resilience. Sam Harris said it right when he said meditation might be the closest a human can get to a superpower.
4 stars overall as a non-fiction. It had a few points where I did have to push through the drier parts of the book, and I put the book down several times just to process information, but the content was solid and interesting enough for me to keep going through the slower parts.
5 stars for organizing most of the science and history of meditation neatly into a readable and intriguing book. (less)
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Frank
Oct 04, 2017Frank rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: meditation
I give it 4 stars for describing well the authors' investigations into meditation. Also, the structure of the book is great: most chapters end with a section called "In a Nutshell" that summarizes the chapter very well. These summaries, according to the authors, were included so that the reader could skip the chapter if desired. I read some of those summaries in place of their respective chapters and found them to be clear and detailed yet concise.
Now, do NOT read this book if you're expecting to learn meditation techniques. The authors avoid this, I suspect, because there are many other books out there that do this. Some of those books are written by acquaintances of the authors. I did not give the book 5 stars for that reason--I was hoping to learn details in meditation that I don't already know. If this, too, is what you're looking for, I recommend that you at least read the summaries. You'll be able to finish the book in 1 or 2 nights.
The authors' meticulous research has determined that there definitely are 3 benefits to meditation: resilience against stress, improved concentration, and greater compassion. Their conclusions have inspired me to continue meditating and make it part of my lifestyle, just like exercise. I've even been inspired by this book to attempt to find a meditation teacher. (less)
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Mark Monroe
Jan 29, 2018Mark Monroe rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: absolute-favorites
One of the most inspiring books I've read!
The book gives a very easy to follow guide through the modern science of meditation. the authors, who are American scientists, established leaders in the field of Neuroscience, and avid mediators, are very relatable all throughout. they also have a close working relationship and with the Dalai Lama. the Dalai lama very much believes in the work of these authors/researchers and their organization, The Mind and Life Institute.
What I love about honest science is it is confident about what it understands, but is not afraid to express where it doesn't have enough information to defend one hypothesis over another. Richie and Daniel do not shy away from expressing what the science of the mind doesn't understand yet, or where the limits of the benefits of meditation lie.
the "in a nutshell" at the end of each chapter helped refresh me on the very tightly information packed chapters. I am planning on re-reading the "in a nutshell" portion of each chapter once a week or so.
if you are at all skeptical about the value of meditation and if it has any real effect on one's life, read this book (less)
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Siska
Oct 05, 2019Siska rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: spiritual, neuroscience
An honest meta-review on meditation from two meditation enthusiasts, who happened to be scientists in psychology.
Here are list of many researches on meditation, looking at the impact to the brain and traits, and it is amazing.
I would highly recommend this book to those who:
1. are into science as it feeds so much knowledge on meditation.
2. would like to know more about the vast range of meditation and Mindfulness practices, which is far beyond the mini practices available from apps and blogs and other social media.
3. would enjoy a little scientific explanation on what happens to their brain after some meditation practice, as to explain the transformation they are experiencing with deep practices of meditation.
A little note on the book is how some points are over-discribed and discussed. It could have been made simpler. (less)
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Manik Patil
Oct 25, 2017Manik Patil rated it really liked it · review of another edition
The authors have presented a meta-analysis of most of the scientific research done till date on meditation and it's impact on physiology as well as psychology.
This work is an attempt to remove any discredit around meditation. The authors have proactively criticized hyperbole claims around benefits of meditation by analyzing them through a critical lens.
For a practitioner of meditation, it offers the reader a very evidence-based journey on why one should continue on the path. However, if you are trying to learn meditation, this book offers little help. (For that you can use the guided meditation apps ;-))
Certainly, a must read for an evangelist of meditation. (less)
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Jillian Doherty
Jun 05, 2017Jillian Doherty rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
I've studied TM and meditate as often (should always be more often :) as I can, as the results are not only instantaneous, but long lasting.
This well researched, and well written look into the science behind meditation is timely and important.
We as a nation have never been more open to 'alternative medicines' as we've seen the clean and abundant results. I appreciate this title as if outlines it in an understandable way for those interesting in the science, mind/body, or outcome from daily practice! (less)
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