Admission Requirements
This course is an (extracurricular) Honours Class: an honours elective in the Honours College programme. There are limited spots available for second-year and third-year non honours students. Admission will be based on motivation. Please note: like all Honours Classes, this class has an academic approach and doesn't serve therapeutic aims.
Students that want to graduate in the summer of 2019 are advised not to take a summer course, since we cannot guarantee that your grade will be processed in time for Bachelor’s certification and/ or Master’s admission procedures.
Description
Interest in meditation, mindfulness, and contemplation has grown exponentially in recent years. Rather than being seen as mystical practices from ancient Buddhism or esoteric philosophy, they are increasingly seen as technologies rooted in evidence from psychology and neuroscience. Mindfulness has become the basis for numerous therapeutic interventions, both as a treatment in healthcare and as a means of enhancing well-being and happiness. For millions around the world, mindfulness has become a life-style choice, enhancing and enriching everyday experience. Mindfulness is big business.
But, what actually is mindfulness? Is it really good for you? Can anyone learn it? How can you recognize charlatans? Would you want to live in a mindful society, and would it smell like sandalwood? What does it feel like to be mindful? Are you mindful already, and how would you know?
Building on the MOOC 'De-Mystifying Mindfulness' that was created after earlier successful renditions of this Honours Class, this innovative course combines conventional scholarly inquiry from multiple disciplines (ranging from psychology, through philosophy, to politics) with experiential learning (including specially designed ‘meditation labs,’ in which you’ll get chance to practice and analyze mindfulness on yourself). In the end, the course aims to provide a responsible, comprehensive, and inclusive education about (and in) mindfulness as a contemporary phenomenon.
Course Objectives
Students have knowlegde about the possible roots of mindfulness in various philosophical, psychological, and spiritual traditions;
Students can define what mindfulness is and have knowlegde about the parameters of a comparative and global concept, including its critical, ethical, and political implications;
Students have experience with practising mindfulness techniques.
Timetable
Intensive one-week summer course, meetings will be held daily from 24 up to and including 28 June from 10 till 17h.
Location
Old Observatory, room c005.
Programme
- Introduction to Mindfulness
- Psychology of/& Mindfulness
- Philosophy of/& Mindfulness
- Politics of/& Mindfulness
- Mindfulness into the Future
The one-week programme is imagined as an intensive ‘retreat.’
The morning sessions will include meditation-labs, for class practice.
The afternoon sessions will include more conventional academic seminars, covering the interrogation of mindfulness from the standpoint of various different scholarly disciplines, including psychology, philosophy, politics, history and religious studies.
Course Load
This course is worth 5 EC, which means the total course load equals 140 hours.
Lectures and seminars: 5 sessions of 7 hours
Literature reading: 4 hours p/session
Daily exercises, practices, presentation, essay: 85 hours
Assessment Method
Daily written exercises (reflection)
Daily practices
Presentation
Final essay
Deadline Final essay and diary: Monday 29 July 2019 23.59 hrs.
Please note: attendance is mandatory.
Blackboard and uSis
Blackboard will be used in this course. Students can register for the Blackboard site two weeks prior to the start of the course.
Please note: students are not required to register through uSis for the Honours Classes. Your registration will be done centrally.
Reading List
TBA
Registration
Enrolling in this course is possible from Tuesday November 6th until Thursday November 15th 23.59 hrs through the Honours Academy, via this link. It is not necessary to register in uSis.