This project explores the philosophical claim that love, when lived consciously, functions as a natural form of meditation. Moving beyond the conventional understanding of meditation as a formal contemplative practice and love as merely emotional attachment, the work examines their shared phenomenological structure. The study argues that love reorganizes attention, intensifies awareness, softens ego-boundaries, and reveals unconscious psychological patterns. When attraction matures into pure attention, love shifts from projection and possession to presence. In this integration of emotional intensity and reflective stillness, love mirrors the essential structure of meditation. Rather than treating love as dependency or sentimentality, the project situates it within phenomenology and philosophy of mind as an event in consciousness — one that enables self-recognition through relational experience. This work forms part of an ongoing independent philosophical inquiry into consciousness, identity, and lived awareness.
Mayank Singh (Thu,) studied this question.