Meditative Practices in the Hindu Tantric Traditions: A Theoretical Approach
“The study of meditation in the tantric traditions immediately presents a number of hermeneutical problems. ‘In the history of religions’, notes Alan Sponberg, ‘meditation has been a notoriously vague and multivalent concept’ (1986: 16), while ‘tantrism’ has been described by André Padoux as ‘a protean phenomenon, so complex and elusive that it is practically impossible to define it or, at least, agree on its definition’ (2002: 17). With an overall aim to explore considerations and methods to the study of meditation in the Hindu tantric traditions, this essay shall begin by seeking to establish parameters around the complex yet important religious categories of meditation and tantrism. The process of defining these categories highlights the shortcomings of the phenomenological approach and the dangers of reducing what may appear to be the same practice or experience down to an essence. In an attempt to move beyond phenomenology1 , the second section, drawing on the work of Gadamer, focuses on understanding and historicity. The third and final section shall discuss understanding and language with an endeavour to illustrate how Bakhtin’s theories of language can provide insight and tools in response to the limitations of the phenomenological approach…”