Skip to content
Currents Home

By JCS Editor – October 12, 2023

  • Proceedings
2 min read

Generative Contemplation Symposium 2023 Video Proceedings

Self-Emergent Visions

Currents Home

By JCS Editor – October 12, 2023

  • Proceedings
2 min read

Generative Contemplation Symposium 2023 Video Proceedings

Self-Emergent Visions

The Generative Contemplation Symposium was hosted by the Contemplative Sciences Center at the University of Virginia in April 2023. The following is the video proceedings along with searchable transcripts of Session IV: Self-Emergent Visions which focused on the deliberate elicitation of effortless self-emergent visionary experiences. We invite you to watch these creative interdisciplinary explorations between Buddhist Studies scholars, scientists, philosophers, and teacher-practitioners.

This symposium united specialists from diverse fields, including religious studies, philosophy, cognitive neuroscience, the arts, and Buddhism, at the Special Collections Library Auditorium at the University of Virginia. The event featured four thematic sessions over two days, fostering open discussions among attendees, which included UVA faculty, students, experts and contemplatives from other institutions as well as locally. These interdisciplinary dialogues formed the symposium’s core, enabling attendees to merge insights from different fields and forge new understandings of contemplation and the impact of these practices on human experience. Attendees, both participants and the audience, departed with fresh insights, connections, unanswered questions, and a shared determination to continue these dialogues and collaborations.

Session IV: Self-Emergent Visions: Tibetan “Great Perfection” (Dzokchen) practices involve the deliberate elicitation of effortless self-emergent visionary experiences through gazing at the sun, a cloudless sky, or complete darkness while applying specific postures, gazes, attentional modalities, focus, breathwork, and at times visualizations to stimulate and influence dynamic and autonomous visions of buddhas. Visions are endogenously generated, meaning that they are amalgamations of past experiences and the architecture of the brain. Thus, self-emergent visions could be interpreted as externalized manifestations of the self, further contributing to the expanding representation of selfhood. The practice has implications for understanding conscious experience as constructed through perceptual predictions interacting with sensory data, suggesting that much of the world we experience is from inside rather than outside.  

Contributors to this session of the Symposium were: 

  1. David Germano (Buddhist Studies), University of Virginia
  2. Per Sederberg (Neuroscience), University of Virginia  
  3. James Gentry (Buddhist Studies), Stanford University  
  4. Anne Klein (Practitioner), Rice University  
  5. Dave Glowacki (Technology), CiTIUS Intelligent Technologies Research Centre, Spain

Part 1

Part 2

Visit the Generative Contemplation Symposium Collection to watch or search the transcripts and related information.

Contemplative Currents

Related Posts

  • Josh Brahinsky, Jonas Mago, Mark Miller, and Michael Lifshitz • October 23, 2025

    Two Paths, One Spiral

    Comparative Insights from Jhāna Meditation and Speaking in Tongues

    Jhāna meditation and the practice of speaking in tongues could hardly look more different. In jhāna, the body settles into stillness: quiet, seated, composed. From the outside, nothing stirs—an almost austere calm, cultivated through generations of Buddhist teaching that has…
  • JCS Editor • August 29, 2025

    Special Issue Announcement

    Special Issue #08: Contemplation in Education and Human Development

    The JCS Editors are delighted to announce Special Issue #08: Contemplation in Education and Human Development with guest editors Robert W. Roeser (Emory University), Brendan Ozawa-de Silva (Emory University), Yuki Imoto (Keio University), and Kimberly Schonert-Reichl (University of Illinois, Chicago)….
  • JCS Editor • August 29, 2025

    Special Issue Announcement

    Special Issue #09: Contemplative Computing

    The JCS Editors are delighted to announce Special Issue #09: Contemplative Computing, with guest editors Angela Orebaugh (University of Virginia), Alex Soojung-Kim Pang (Stanford University), and Gunter Bombaerts (Eindhoven University of Technology). This Special Issue invites scholars to explore the…

Related Posts

  • JCS Editor • December 20, 2024

    Conference Recap

    American Academy of Religion Annual Conference, 2024

    The American Academy of Religion held its 2024 Annual Meeting in San Diego, CA, November 23-26. The Contemplative Studies unit sponsored or co-sponsored three panels exploring contemplative practices, experiences, and traditions. Topics ranged from Confucian contemplations for college students, to…
    Read more
  • JCS Editor • March 28, 2024

    Revisit the Generative Contemplation Symposium 2023

    In April 2023, the Contemplative Sciences Center at the University of Virginia hosted its first Generative Contemplation Symposium in Charlottesville, Virginia. This gathering convened experts in Contemplative Studies – scholars, philosophers, cognitive neuroscientists, artists, and Buddhist practitioners – to present…
    Read more
  • JCS Editor • December 7, 2023

    Conference Recap

    American Academy of Religion Annual Conference, 2023

    The American Academy of Religion hosted its 2023 Annual Meeting in San Antonio, TX, November 18-21. Among the hundreds of panels and roundtable discussions were notable explorations of contemplative practice among scholars of religion, anthropology, philosophy, psychology, and art history….
    Read more

Connect with us on social media

Instagram
Facebook

Copyright © 2025
Images credits


Published by the Contemplative Sciences Center at the University of Virginia
JCS ISSN: 3066-9030

Search

Subscribe

to updates through the Contemplative Forum.

Highlight

Contemplation +
What is Contemplation?

Filters

All Posts
Announcements
Articles
Events
Interviews
Op-Eds
Proceedings
Reviews
Special Issues

Submit

to Contemplative Currents.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.