Language-games in live mindfulness-based stress reduction: a philosophy of language analysis of participant-trainer dialogue
Ingeborg van den Bold, Sanneke de Haan, Jenny Slatman

TL;DR
This study explores how participants in mindfulness sessions learn to describe body sensations using philosophical analysis of their dialogue.
Contribution
The first application of Wittgenstein and Austin's philosophy to live MBSR dialogue, analyzing language-games and speech acts in body awareness learning.
Findings
Participants struggled to verbalize bodily sensations, often expressing emotions or judgments instead.
Learning body awareness is framed as learning a 'language-game' of reporting sense perceptions.
The study highlights the importance of live dialogue in mindfulness training, which apps and recordings lack.
Abstract
It is important to explore how words are given to body awareness in Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), as this impacts health and illness, while the literature on this topic is scarce. This study is the first to explore the learning process of enhancing one's body awareness live in MBSR sessions through a philosophy of language lens. It is the first known application of Wittgenstein and Austin to full-course, live MBSR dialogue, and it analyzes language-games and all three speech acts in context. This is a suitable approach, as these philosophers focus on how language is used in real-life conversations. We analyzed the full transcript of a complete MBSR training with interpretative phenomenological analysis. The results indicate that verbalizing body awareness was difficult for MBSR participants. Participants talked about emotions or they made rational judgments, while they…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMindfulness and Compassion Interventions · Emotions and Moral Behavior · Pain Management and Placebo Effect
