Some theorists have argued that restorative justice can be defined as a theory of justice based on the. relationality of self-the idea that the self exists in and through its relationships with others. This account of self, while analytically compelling, conflicts with our intuitions of individuality I argue that Buddhist metaphysics provides an explanation of this conflict, and that meditation practice can help restorative justice practitioners develop an intuitive understanding of the relationality of self
Through a theoretical analysis, this paper suggests that the Buddhist philosophy and psychology offe...
What follows is an attempt to think through a set of clinical issues that have emerged for me in rec...
This research investigates the evolving relevance of Buddhism in the contemporary West and the full ...
Some theorists have argued that restorative justice can be defined as a theory of justice based on t...
Much scholarly attention has been devoted to examining the incorporation of Buddhist-derived meditat...
International audienceScientific research highlights the central role of specific psychological proc...
The teaching unit Buddhist Practice and Analytical Psychology in the masters programme in Analytical...
ReligionPh.D.Since its inception in the 1960s, the scientific research of Buddhist-based meditation ...
Clinicians from several theoretical approaches have explored the common ground between Buddhism and ...
The author attempts to integrate the concepts of self used in psychoanalytic theory with the underst...
In this dissertation a comparison is made between the view of the self offered by Buddhist psycholog...
My hopes for my book, Relational Being (2009), were several in number. After placing the tradition o...
This presentation was delivered on May 6, 2016 by Dr. Paul Condon, Dr. John Dunne, and Dr. Christine...
Graduation date: 2015Interweaving perspectives from both social cognitive psychology and Tibetan Bud...
For more than twenty years key thinkers of Engaged Buddhism have used terms like “justice” and “soci...
Through a theoretical analysis, this paper suggests that the Buddhist philosophy and psychology offe...
What follows is an attempt to think through a set of clinical issues that have emerged for me in rec...
This research investigates the evolving relevance of Buddhism in the contemporary West and the full ...
Some theorists have argued that restorative justice can be defined as a theory of justice based on t...
Much scholarly attention has been devoted to examining the incorporation of Buddhist-derived meditat...
International audienceScientific research highlights the central role of specific psychological proc...
The teaching unit Buddhist Practice and Analytical Psychology in the masters programme in Analytical...
ReligionPh.D.Since its inception in the 1960s, the scientific research of Buddhist-based meditation ...
Clinicians from several theoretical approaches have explored the common ground between Buddhism and ...
The author attempts to integrate the concepts of self used in psychoanalytic theory with the underst...
In this dissertation a comparison is made between the view of the self offered by Buddhist psycholog...
My hopes for my book, Relational Being (2009), were several in number. After placing the tradition o...
This presentation was delivered on May 6, 2016 by Dr. Paul Condon, Dr. John Dunne, and Dr. Christine...
Graduation date: 2015Interweaving perspectives from both social cognitive psychology and Tibetan Bud...
For more than twenty years key thinkers of Engaged Buddhism have used terms like “justice” and “soci...
Through a theoretical analysis, this paper suggests that the Buddhist philosophy and psychology offe...
What follows is an attempt to think through a set of clinical issues that have emerged for me in rec...
This research investigates the evolving relevance of Buddhism in the contemporary West and the full ...