Absorption: Human Nature and Buddhist Liberation
By Johannes Bronkhorst
141 pages… sexuality in its various manifestations is among the urges that are not intrinsically directed at specific objects and activities. Objects and activities come to play a role [only] because the mind has the tendency of keeping a record of objects and activities rather than of the states which are the real causes of satisfaction.
An admirable attempt to square Western psychological theories (especially those of Freud) with the Buddha’s experience of jhāna. The two essays in this volume provide novel psychological models which neuroscientists and meditators alike will find provocative and even revelatory as they grapple, each from different angles, with the implications of this incredible state of consciousness.