Mind, Brain, Buddha: Neuroscience of Meditation
MTA
What contemporary brain science reveals about Buddhist practices and well-being
2nd Edition
"Mind, Brain, Buddha" bridges Buddhist meditation practices with contemporary neuroscience to show how systematic mental training reshapes attention, emotion regulation, self‑concept, and prosocial capacities. The book explains that meditation cultivates focused attention (samadhi) and meta‑awareness (sati) by strengthening dorsal attention and salience networks while quieting the default mode network, thereby reducing mind‑wandering and self‑referential rumination. These changes are underpinned by neuroplasticity: increased grey matter in the prefrontal cortex, insula, and hippocampus; decreased amygdala volume; and enhanced connectivity between top‑down control regions and limbic structures, which together improve emotional regulation, interoceptive awareness, and stress resilience.
Practical protocols are provided for each stage of training—from brief breath‑anchored resets and body scans to loving‑kindness, compassion, open‑monitoring, and self‑inquiry practices—tailored for busy lives, trauma‑sensitive contexts, intensive retreats, and integration into work, education, and healthcare settings. The text emphasizes ethical intention, balanced effort, and safety, urging practitioners to track progress through subjective journals, heart‑rate variability, sleep quality, and simple behavioral experiments while cautioning against overreliance on technology or uniform prescriptions. Throughout, it acknowledges meditation’s limits, noting that it complements but does not replace professional care for severe mental health conditions and that benefits accrue with consistent, mindful engagement rather than occasional heroic effort.
Ultimately, the book presents meditation as a skillful means to reduce suffering by fostering present‑moment awareness, compassionate connection, and a flexible sense of self, encouraging readers to weave formal practice into daily life as an ongoing experiment guided by both ancient wisdom and empirical evidence. The path ahead lies in personalizing one’s curriculum, continually refining effort and intention, and allowing the cultivated inner qualities to manifest in relationships, decisions, and collective well‑being.
For readers seeking an evidence-based approach to meditation that respects both neuroscience and Buddhist wisdom. Ideal for professionals managing stress, individuals working with anxiety or emotional reactivity, healthcare providers integrating mindfulness, and anyone building a sustainable personal practice. Suitable for both beginners wanting clear guidance and experienced practitioners looking to deepen their understanding of meditation's mechanisms.
May 24, 2026
57,737 words
4 hours 3 minutes
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