Hypnosis and meditation: Towards an integrative science of conscious planes

Author:   Amir Raz (Department of Psychiatry, Neurology and Neurosurgery, McGill University, Canada) ,  Michael Lifshitz (Doctoral candidate, Doctoral candidate, Integrated Program in Neuroscience, McGill University, Canada)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198759102


Pages:   496
Publication Date:   07 April 2016
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Hypnosis and meditation: Towards an integrative science of conscious planes


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Author:   Amir Raz (Department of Psychiatry, Neurology and Neurosurgery, McGill University, Canada) ,  Michael Lifshitz (Doctoral candidate, Doctoral candidate, Integrated Program in Neuroscience, McGill University, Canada)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 18.20cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 24.80cm
Weight:   1.056kg
ISBN:  

9780198759102


ISBN 10:   019875910
Pages:   496
Publication Date:   07 April 2016
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Janet Gyatso: Foreword Irving Kirsch: Foreword Section I - Introduction 1: Michael Lifshitz: Contemplative experience in context: Hypnosis, meditation, and the transformation of consciousness Section II - Philosophical, historical, and cultural perspectives 2: Anne Harrington: Thinking about trance over a century: The making of a set of impasses 3: Thupten Jinpa: Visualization as mental cultivation: Expanding our understanding of meditation 4: Quinton Deeley: Tranforming experience through Chod: Insights from hypnosis research 5: Samuel Veissière: Varieties of tulpa experiences: The hypnotic nature of human sociality, personhood, and interphenomenality Section III - Similarities and differences 6: Jelena Markovic and Evan Thompson: Hypnosis and meditation: A neurophenomenological comparison 7: Zoltan Dienes, Peter Lush, Rebecca Semmens-Wheeler, Jim Parkinson, Ryan Scott, and Peter Naish: Hypnosis as self-deception; Meditation as self-insight 8: Lynn C. Waelde, Jason M. Thompson, and David Spiegel: Hypnosis and mindfulness: Experiential and neurophysiological relationships 9: Charles Tart: Meditation: Some kind of (self)-hypnosis? A deeper look 10: Vince Polito and Michael H. Connors: Towards a science of internal experience: Conceptual and methodological issues in hypnosis and meditation research Section IV - Cognitive mechanisms 11: Kieran Fox, Yoona Kang, Michael Lifshitz, and Kalina Christoff: Increasing cognitive-emotional flexibility with meditation and hypnosis: The cognitive neuroscience of de-automatization 12: Benjamin Mooneyham and Jonathan W. Schooler: Mind-wandering and meta-awareness in hypnosis and meditation: Relating executive function across states of consciousness 13: John Vervaeke and Leonardo Ferraro: Reformulating the mindfulness construct: The cognitive processes at work in mindfulness, hypnosis and mystical states 14: Ulrich Ott: Absorption in hypnotic trance and meditation Section V - Neural underpinnings 15: Etzel Cardeña: Towards comprehensive neurophenomenological research in hypnosis and meditation 16: Yi-Yuan Tang and Michael I. Posner: Influencing conflict in the human brain by changing brain states 17: Graham Jamieson: A unified theory of hypnosis and meditation states: The interoceptive predictive coding approach 18: William J. McGeown: Hypnosis, hypnotic suggestibility and meditation: An integrative review of the associated brain regions and networks Section VI - Clinical applications 19: Michael Yapko: Suggesting mindfulness: Reflections on the uneasy relationship between mindfulness and hypnosis 20: Norman Farb: Self-transformation through hypnosis and mindfulness meditation: What exactly is being transformed? 21: Fadel Zeidan and Joshua Grant: Meditative and hypnotic analgesia: Different directions, same road? 22: Tony Toneatto and Erin Courtice: Hypnosis and mindfulness meditation: A psychoanalytic perspective 23: Steven J. Lynn, Joseph P. Green, Victor Elinoff, Jessica Baltman, and Reed Maxwell: When worlds combine: Synthesizing hypnosis, mindfulness, and acceptance-based approaches to psychotherapy and smoking cessation Section VII - Conclusion 24: Amir Raz: Hypnosis and meditation as vehicles to elucidate human consciousness Dan Brown: Afterword

Reviews

This book compares and contrasts hypnosis and meditation from a number of vantage points. It explores their philosophies and histories, as well as their cognitive and neural foundations. This book will appeal to a general audience, as well as professionals in the field. -Doody's Health Science


This book compares and contrasts hypnosis and meditation from a number of vantage points. It explores their philosophies and histories, as well as their cognitive and neural foundations. This book will appeal to a general audience, as well as professionals in the field. -<em>Doody's Health Science</em>


Author Information

Professor Raz earned his Ph.D. in Brain Science from the Interdisciplinary Center for Computational Neuroscience at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem under the supervision of the late Professor Shlomo Bentin. He then went on to a post-doctoral fellowship with Professor Michael Posner at the Weill Medical College of Cornell University, where he took on a faculty position thereafter. He then joined the faculty at Columbia University in the City of New York and later became the Canada Research Chair at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. Michael is a doctoral student investigating the science of contemplative experience in the Raz Lab at McGill University. His research centers on comparing approaches to the transformation of consciousness - ranging from meditation to hypnosis, placebos, and psychedelics. Working from the vantage of neurophenomenology, Michael aims to synthesize knowledge of various contemplative practices to advance the science of attention, consciousness, and meta-cognition. Michael's work is supported through a Vanier Graduate Scholarship from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and a Mind & Life Institute Francisco J. Varela Research Award. He completed a master's degree in the Integrated Program of Neuroscience at the Raz Lab, and an undergraduate degree with honors in psychology and minors in philosophy and world religions - both at McGill University.

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