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The
English word meditation comes from the Latin meditatio meaning
'to ponder' or 'to ruminate.' The Pāḷi word usually
translated as meditation is bhāvanā and means 'to develop,'
'to cultivate,' or 'to expand.' Thus the word meditation is actually
an unsatisfactory one for the various techniques of psychological
transformation taught by the Buddha. In relation to thoughts, one
could say that there are three approaches to meditation in Buddhism:
(1) to utilize thoughts, (2) to still thoughts and (3)
to observe thoughts. Loving kindness meditation would be
an example of the first of these. The meditator deliberately thinks
particular types of thoughts for the purpose of evoking certain
emotions and behaviour. An example of the second of these types of
meditation would be mindfulness of breathing, where the
meditator focuses his or her attention on the breath thus slowing
down and finally stopping the flow of thoughts. In mindfulness
meditation the mediator develops the ability to simply observe mental
activity (thoughts, emotions, conceptualizing, etc.) thus
gradually becoming less influenced by them. See Jhāna.
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