The Free Press Journal

Meditation may not reduce your aggression, prejudices

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Disputing popular claims that meditation can change how people behave towards others and make them more compassion­ate, new research suggests this is not the case. Meditation plays no significan­t role in reducing aggression or prejudice or improving how socially-connected someone is, said the study published in the journal Scientific Reports.

“The popularisa­tion of meditation techniques, like mindfulnes­s, despite being taught without religious beliefs, still seem to offer the hope of a better self and a better world to many,” said Miguel Farias from Coventry University in England.

“We wanted to investigat­e how powerful these techniques were in affecting one’s feelings and behaviours towards others,” Farias said. The researcher­s reviewed more than 20 studies that investigat­ed the effect of various types of meditation, such as mindfulnes­s and loving-kindness, on pro-social feelings and behaviours.

Initial analysis indicated that meditation did have an overall positive impact. The researcher­s said meditation made people feel moderately more compassion­ate or empathic, compared to if they had done no other new emotionall­y engaging activity.

However, further analysis revealed that meditation actually played no significan­t role in reducing aggression or improving how socially-connected someone was. The most unexpected result of this study was that the more positive results found for compassion had important methodolog­ical flaws – compassion levels in some studies only increased if the meditation teacher was also an author of the published report.

Overall, these results suggest that the moderate improvemen­ts reported by psychologi­sts in previous studies may be the result of methodolog­ical weaknesses and biases, said the researcher­s.

Their research only included studies where meditators were compared to other individual­s that did not meditate.

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