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Negi 教授(Lobsang Tenzin Negi)曾是 洛桑校長的學生。
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與 Daniel Goleman、Peter Senge 等人共同推動 Triple Focus 理論:
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覺知(Awareness)
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慈悲(Compassion)
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參與(Engagement)
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三個層面:
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個人(Personal)
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人際(Interpersonal)
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系統(System)
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此教育與研究計畫已在 78 個國家推行。
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台灣由 利仁教育基金會協助推廣。
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推動理念:6 Deep Change(六個深層改變)—從成人開始,影響教育
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課程設計:幼兒至 18 歲完整教育課程
看到他人痛苦時,心中生起溫暖的關懷,並產生理解與行動的動力,去減少或解除他人的痛苦。
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面對他人痛苦時,產生減輕其痛苦的動力
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慈愛與關懷
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願意提供他人所需要的支持
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能覺知他人的匱乏(aware of lackness)
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以他人為中心的關懷能力
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理解他人感受的能力
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是慈悲產生的起點
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來自大腦神經元的同頻共振
Richard J. Davidson(2004)
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冥想會產生強烈的 Gamma Waves(伽瑪腦波)
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出現 High Neural Synchrony(高度神經同步)
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提升專注力
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提升覺知能力
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增強正向情緒
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增強幫助他人的動力
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提升行動效率
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心臟疾病
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糖尿病
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失智症
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癌症
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憂鬱
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焦慮
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職業倦怠(burnout)
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Cortisol(皮質醇)上升
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發炎反應增加
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降低皮質醇
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改善情緒
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提升覺知
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增加慈悲敏銳度
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提升處理事情的能力
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感受他人的痛苦
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透過冥想轉化情緒
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看見正向能量
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找到承擔與幫助他人的方法
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穿越負面感受
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不被擊敗
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建立正向迴路
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進行 正念對話(Mindful Dialogue)
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老人替企鵝清除油污
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企鵝每年游 8000 公里回來看他
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觀察內在情緒與念頭
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專注與安定心念
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回想內心曾經的仁慈畫面
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感受當時的情緒
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重新體驗慈悲感受
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產生新的體悟
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強化慈悲意識
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水滋養萬物
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水象徵慈悲
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水滋長菩提心
Topic: Social Emotional Learning Lecture –
An Exploration of the Empirical Study of the Science of Compassion and Its Future Prospects
Speaker: Professor Lobsang Tenzin Negi, Emory University, USA
Location: Fuzhi Campus
Date & Time: March 5, 2026 (Thursday), 9:00–12:00
1. Origin and Background of the Research
Professor Lobsang Tenzin Negi was once a student of President Lozang.
Together with Daniel Goleman and Peter Senge, he promoted the Triple Focus Theory, which includes:
Three Core Capacities
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Awareness
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Compassion
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Engagement
Three Levels of Application
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Personal
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Interpersonal
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System
This educational and research initiative has been implemented in 78 countries.
In Taiwan, it is promoted with the support of the Lee Ren Education Foundation.
Guiding Concept:
Six Deep Changes – beginning with adults and influencing the education system.
Curriculum Design:
A complete educational curriculum from early childhood to age 18.
2. The Core Meaning of Compassion
Definition of Compassion:
When seeing the suffering of others, a warm sense of care arises in the heart, together with the motivation to understand and take action to reduce or relieve that suffering.
3. Four Psychological Capacities Related to Compassion
1. Compassion (Karuna)
The motivation to alleviate the suffering of others when encountering their pain.
2. Loving-Kindness (Maitri)
A quality of kindness and care.
Willingness to provide the support others need.
The ability to recognize others’ lack or unmet needs.
3. Sympathy
A concern-centered orientation toward others.
4. Empathy
The ability to understand the feelings of others.
It is the starting point of compassion and arises from neural resonance in the brain.
Three Types of Empathy
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Emotional Empathy (Sharing)
Feeling the emotions of others. -
Cognitive Empathy (Thinking)
Understanding another persons situation. -
Motivational Empathy (Caring)
The willingness to help others.
4. Three Levels of Compassion
1️⃣ The Wish
“I hope you are free from suffering.”
2️⃣ A Stronger Aspiration
“I truly hope you are free from suffering.”
3️⃣ The Level of Action
“What can I do to help you?”
(From goodwill → concern → action)
5. Compassion and Neuroscience Research
Researcher: Richard J. Davidson (2004)
Research Focus: Compassion Meditation
Key Findings
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Meditation produces strong Gamma Waves in the brain.
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It leads to High Neural Synchrony.
Effects
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Improved concentration
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Increased awareness
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Enhanced positive emotions
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Stronger motivation to help others
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Greater efficiency in action
Conclusion:
The more compassion one develops → the more effective one’s actions become → the more positive one’s mindset grows.
6. Effects of Compassion on Physical and Mental Health
1. Body
Compassion practices may help improve or prevent:
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Heart disease
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Diabetes
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Dementia
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Cancer
2. Brain
It can help alleviate:
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Depression
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Anxiety
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Occupational burnout
7. Stress and Meditation
Stress leads to:
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Increased Cortisol
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Greater inflammatory responses
Effects of Meditation
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Reduces cortisol levels
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Improves mood
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Enhances awareness
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Increases sensitivity to compassion
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Strengthens the ability to handle challenges
8. Compassion and the Brain
Compassion activates different areas of the brain that:
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Perceive others’ suffering
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Transform emotional responses through meditation
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Recognize positive energy
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Identify ways to support and help others
The process includes:
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Moving through negative emotions
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Not being defeated by them
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Establishing positive neural pathways
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Practicing Mindful Dialogue
9. Compassion Training and Meditation Methods
1. Kindness Moment
Observe compassionate events in daily life.
Example
An elderly man in Brazil rescued a penguin.
He cleaned oil from the penguin’s body.
The penguin later swam 8,000 km every year to visit him again.
Such stories can inspire Mindful Dialogue.
2. Analytical Meditation and Stabilizing Meditation
Two meditation approaches:
Analytical Meditation
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Observing internal emotions and thoughts
Stabilizing Meditation
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Focusing the mind and cultivating calmness
3. Loving-Kindness Image Meditation
Method
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Recall a moment of kindness from your life
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Feel the emotions from that moment
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Re-experience the sense of compassion
Effect
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Generates new insights
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Strengthens compassionate awareness
10. Conclusion
SEE Learning Asia Co-Director Zondura shared an analogy:
A rainy day symbolizes “prosperity through water.”
Meaning
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Water nourishes all living things.
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Water symbolizes compassion.
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Water nurtures the awakening of the Bodhicitta (the altruistic mind of enlightenment).
Therefore:
When compassion arises, life awakens and grows.
Note: These are shared notes from the lecture. Corrections and suggestions are welcome.
Additional Notes
Scientific Evidence (CBCT)
Professor Negi developed Cognitively-Based Compassion Training (CBCT).
Research shows that systematic training can change brain structure and function, significantly increasing positive emotions and reducing Compassion Fatigue, which arises from empathy overload.
SEE Learning
Social, Emotional, and Ethical Learning – an educational framework integrating social-emotional development with ethical awareness.
The lecture, “An Exploration of the Empirical Study of the Science of Compassion and Its Future Prospects,” by Professor Lobsang Tenzin Negi of Emory University explored the scientific foundations, psychological mechanisms, and educational applications of compassion. Negi, a former student of President Lozang, has collaborated with scholars such as Daniel Goleman and Peter Senge to promote the Triple Focus framework, which emphasizes three capacities—awareness, compassion, and engagement—across three levels: personal, interpersonal, and systemic. This initiative, integrated into the SEE Learning (Social, Emotional, and Ethical Learning) program, has been implemented in 78 countries and supports educational development from early childhood through age 18.
Compassion is defined as the warm concern that arises when witnessing others’ suffering, accompanied by the motivation to understand and alleviate that suffering. The lecture distinguished four related psychological capacities: compassion (the motivation to relieve suffering), loving-kindness (the desire to support others and recognize their needs), sympathy (other-centered concern), and empathy (the ability to understand others’ feelings). Empathy, considered the starting point of compassion, includes emotional empathy (sharing feelings), cognitive empathy (understanding situations), and motivational empathy (caring and willingness to help).
Compassion can also develop through three stages: wishing others to be free from suffering, strongly aspiring for their well-being, and ultimately taking action to help them. Neuroscience research, particularly studies on compassion meditation, shows that such practices produce strong gamma brain waves and high neural synchrony. These changes enhance concentration, awareness, positive emotions, and motivation to help others, leading to more effective and compassionate actions.
The lecture also highlighted the benefits of compassion for physical and mental health, including potential improvements in heart disease, diabetes, dementia, depression, anxiety, and burnout. Meditation helps reduce stress-related cortisol levels, improve emotional regulation, and increase sensitivity to others’ needs.
Finally, practical compassion training methods were introduced, such as observing everyday acts of kindness, engaging in analytical and stabilizing meditation, and recalling compassionate memories. These practices help cultivate awareness, strengthen emotional resilience, and foster compassionate action in individuals and communities.
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