2017-05-01

Translating an Ayurvedic Psychology


Freedom's presentation at the Maharshi Ayurveda and Psychology Conference 2017 

Translating an Āyurvedic Integral Psychology
The Āyurvedic literature along with Jyotia, Yoga, Tantra, classical Indian music and theatre, contain explicit and implicit psychological material and practices that reveal a complex integral understanding of the mind and healing. There have been many attempts to integrate these concepts into Western psychology, or translate Eastern concepts into Western psychological language. But the field of western psychology is expanding and changing every decade.
Modern psychology has multiple schools of thought and a newly emerging field which is trying to integrate them. Present integral psychologies mix various western techniques without a framework of mind or consciousness and some even appropriate Vedic terminology for western biomechanical concepts. Modern Āyurveda, as it is practiced in India, is already an integration of ancient wisdom and modern knowledge. This approach holds the potential to create a psychological infrastructure for modern day contradictory theories and research to be understood as working on different levels of the human being. By utilizing the sthūla, sūkṣma, and kāraṇa śarīra with their associated anatomy, Āyurveda provides a truly holistic framework for an integral psychology that incorporates both ancient and modern science.

No comments:

Post a Comment