Framework for the Systematic Quantified Training of Meditation across Meditative Development
Abstract
That meditation is similar to mental training is a widely used analogy that seeks to capture thegrowth-oriented processes that unfold through the intentional performance of mental activities.However, despite its intuitive appeal, this notion remains conceptually underdeveloped. To ourknowledge, no interdisciplinary dialogue has been established with training science—a fielddedicated to the understanding of training variables and principles. In this paper, we address thisgap by first providing an overview of foundational principles in exercise science, introducing keyconcepts such as programming and periodization. Building on this foundation, we outline howcore training variables—such as volume, frequency, duration, density, and intensity—can bemeaningfully adapted to contemplative training contexts. Among these, we propose trainingintensity, defined as the graded phenomenal presence of specific meditative qualities together withthe minimization of counteractive qualities. Referenced against a normative standard, thisconstruct offers a particularly promising link between objective training metrics of meditativeexperience and subjective markers of meditative proficiency. We argue that advanced meditationentails not only the accumulation of training volume over time but the refinement and mastery ofspecific skills that enable access to advanced meditative states, stages, and endpoints. Finally, wesuggest that meditation would benefit from adopting a unified semantic framework andsystematically assessing these training variables, thereby enabling more precise, comparable, andcumulative analyses across studies. This work represents a first step toward integrating principlesfrom training science into meditation research, offering novel tools to understand the mechanismsand trajectories underlying meditative development.
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