Yoga’s Energy Centres: What Science Says About the Chakras
Yoga’s Energy Centres: What Science Says About the Chakras
If you practice a yogic lifestyle in the West, you most likely have been exposed to a myriad of products advertised to “balance your chakras.” From essential oil blends to fist-sized crystals to polished rocks, many of these products are designed to be aesthetically pleasing and affordable. But do they work? More importantly, what do we know about the chakras in the West? This article explores the chakra system and investigates its meaning from a scientific perspective.
What Are the Chakras?
At their heart, the chakras are what Hindu spiritual
traditions describe as seven centres of concentrated metaphysical energy
positioned from the base of the spine to the crown of the head. The word
“chakra” translates to “wheel” in Sanskrit. Each chakra is thought to vibrate
at its own frequency in a circular pattern, funneling energy from the universe
into the body’s energetic system. Although the chakra system may be discussed
among yoga practitioners, it is often regarded as myth among scientific
communities, largely because scientists in the West have conducted very little
research on the topic.
Anatomical Theories of the Chakras
Although empirical research on the chakras is limited,
several scholars in the West have attempted to link the chakras with anatomical
locations in the physical body. For example, the chakras have been theorized to
align with several major nerve plexuses and endocrine glands. Commonly, the
chakras are linked with the esophageal, aortic, hypogastric, and pelvic
plexuses and the prefrontal cortex and neocortex, among other anatomical
structures (1).
Yet in an article on the physiological foundation of chakra
expression, psychologist Richard Maxwell calls previous anatomical theories of
the chakras “overly zealous attempts to reduce chakras to a physical structure”
(2).
Instead, Maxwell proposes a model of understanding the
chakras through gap junctions, or the channels between the cytoplasm of two
adjacent cells that allow communication via the passage of ions, molecules, and
electrical impulses. He theorizes that the chakras align with regions with high
densities of intracellular gap junctions that arose during embryological
development. This theory builds on previous scientific work by Charles Shang
that attempted to explain both chakras and meridians as arising from
intracellular networks between undifferentiated cells involved in embryological
development (3).
Functional Theories of the Chakras
Other researchers have proposed functional theories of the
chakras. For example, Joseph Loizzo, Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatry
in Complementary and Integrative Medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College, has
linked modern maps of the central nervous system (CNS) with maps of the subtle
body (1). Loizzo proposes that the chakras can be cross-referenced with maps of
the central nervous system: the crown chakra with the neocortex, the third eye
with the prefrontal cortex, the throat chakra with the limbic system, the heart
chakra with the midbrain, the solar plexus with the pons, the sacral and root
chakras with the medulla oblongata.
Rather than controlling a specific part of the body, as
previous scientific models of the chakras have proposed, the model by Loizzo
links the chakras with brain-body structures that provide the conscious mind
with information about the CNS and its processes (1). Nonetheless, Loizzo
states that scientists cannot empirically assess this theory because the
technology necessary to do so is still lacking.
Psychological Theories of the Chakras
In addition to its ties to anatomy and embryonic
development, chakra theory has been discussed in association with Western
paradigms of psychological development. Most frequently, chakra theory is
compared with Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, which outlines an order of needs
that one must satisfy in order to develop and grow. For example, in her book
Eastern Body, Western Mind: Psychology and the Chakra System as a Path to the
Self, Anodea Judith (4) relates Maslow’s need for physiological safety with the
root chakra, safety with the sacral chakra, belonging with the solar plexus,
self-esteem with the heart chakra, self-actualization with the throat chakra,
and transcendence with the third eye and crown chakras (4).
Furthermore, chakra theory is also frequently related to
Erikson’s stages of psychosocial development, which maintains that personality
develops in a predetermined order from infancy to adulthood. Judith associates
Erikson’s “trust vs. mistrust” stage with the root and sacral chakras,
“autonomy vs. shame and doubt” with the solar plexus, “initiative vs. guilt”
with the heart chakra, “identity vs. inferiority” with the throat and third eye
chakras, and “intimacy vs. isolation,” “generativity vs. self-absorption,” and
“integrity vs. despair” with the crown chakra. In her book, Judith also relates
chakra theory to a number of other psychological theories of development,
including Piaget’s stages of cognitive development, Freud’s psychosexual stages
(4).
The main difference between chakra theory and Western
psychological theories of development is that chakra theory maps development to
energy stored and held in the body. In this sense, viewing development through
the lens of the chakras is more holistic, embodied, and more keenly attuned to
the mind-body connection than Western paradigms of development. Thus, Western
scholars have proposed chakra theory as a stand-alone model for growth-oriented
development that is distinct from traditional psychological views of
development (5).
Limitations of a Scientific Perspective on the Chakras
Scholarship linking the chakras to psychology is frequently
limited to mental and emotional development, whereas anatomical and functional
theories of the chakras are nearly always restricted to the physical body. Yet,
as Maxwell says, “The challenge for anyone interested in explaining chakras is
to be able to demonstrate how something nonphysical could interact with the
physical” (2). Evidently, our tendency to see the mind and body as separate
entities in the West makes it challenging for chakra theory to be explained.
Modern science still lacks the tools to measure the subtle
energy that makes up the chakra system. Both in the academic sphere and in
consumer culture, our understanding of the chakra system in the West has been
reductive. Although we may look to science to conceptualize the chakras within
Western paradigms, at present, looking to historical texts and practices may
provide us more powerful insight than modern science into the mind-body aspects
of the chakra system.
Compiled by: D. G. Shastri
References
- Maxwell,
R. W. (2009). The physiological foundation of yoga chakra expression.
Zygon, 44(4), 807-824.
- Shang,
C. (2001). Emerging paradigms in mind-body medicine. Journal of
Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 7(1), 83-91. Retrieved from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11246939
- Loizzo,
J. J. (2016). The subtle body: An interoceptive map of central nervous
system function and meditative mind-brain-body integration. Annals of the
New York Academy of Sciences, 1373(1), 78-95. Retrieved from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27164469
- Judith,
A. (2004). Eastern body western mind (pp. 39). New York, NY: Random House,
Inc.
- Best,
C. K. (2010). A chakra system model of lifespan development. International
Journal of Transpersonal Studies, 29(2), 11-27. Retrieved from
https://digitalcommons.ciis.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1147&context=ijts-transpersonalstudies
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