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Religious experience

A religious experience (sometimes known as a spiritual experience, sacred experience, mystical experience) is a subjective experience which is interpreted within a religious framework.[1] The concept originated in the 19th century, as a defense against the growing rationalism of Western society.[2] William James popularised the concept.[2] In some religions, this may result in unverified personal gnosis.[3][4]

Many religious and mystical traditions see religious experiences (particularly the knowledge which comes with them) as revelations caused by divine agency rather than ordinary natural processes. They are considered real encounters with God or gods, or real contact with higher-order realities of which humans are not ordinarily aware.[5]

Skeptics may hold that religious experience is an evolved feature of the human brain amenable to normal scientific study.[note 1] The commonalities and differences between religious experiences across different cultures have enabled scholars to categorize them for academic study.[6]

Definitions edit

William James edit

Psychologist and philosopher William James (1842–1910) described four characteristics of mystical experience in The Varieties of Religious Experience (1901/1902). According to James, such an experience is:

  • Transient – the experience is temporary; the individual soon returns to a "normal" frame of mind. Feels outside normal perception of space and time.
  • Ineffable – the experience cannot be adequately put into words.
  • Noetic – the individual feels that he or she has learned something valuable from the experience. Feels to have gained knowledge that is normally hidden from human understanding.
  • Passive – the experience happens to the individual, largely without conscious control. Although there are activities, such as meditation (see below), that can make religious experience more likely, it is not something that can be turned on and off at will.

Rudolf Otto edit

The German philosopher and theologian Rudolf Otto (1869–1937) argues that there is one common factor to all religious experience, independent of the cultural background. In his book The Idea of the Holy (1923) he identifies this factor as the numinous. The "numinous" experience has two aspects:

  • mysterium tremendum, which is the tendency to invoke fear and trembling;
  • mysterium fascinans, the tendency to attract, fascinate and compel.

The numinous experience also has a personal quality to it, in that the person feels to be in communion with a holy other. Otto sees the numinous as the only possible religious experience. He states: "There is no religion in which it [the numinous] does not live as the real innermost core and without it no religion would be worthy of the name".[7] Otto does not take any other kind of religious experience such as ecstasy and enthusiasm seriously and is of the opinion that they belong to the 'vestibule of religion'.

Norman Habel edit

Biblical scholar Norman Habel defines religious experiences as the structured way in which a believer enters into a relationship with, or gains an awareness of, the sacred within the context of a particular religious tradition.[8] Religious experiences are by their very nature preternatural; that is, out of the ordinary or beyond the natural order of things. They may be difficult to distinguish observationally from psychopathological states such as psychoses or other forms of altered awareness.[9] Not all preternatural experiences are considered to be religious experiences. Following Habel's definition, psychopathological states or drug-induced states of awareness are not considered to be religious experiences because they are mostly not performed within the context of a particular religious tradition.

Moore and Habel identify two classes of religious experiences: the immediate and the mediated religious experience.[10]

  • Mediated – In the mediated experience, the believer experiences the sacred through mediators such as rituals, special persons, religious groups, totemic objects or the natural world.[8]
  • Immediate – The immediate experience comes to the believer without any intervening agency or mediator. The deity or divine is experienced directly.

Richard Swinburne edit

In his book Faith and Reason, the philosopher Richard Swinburne formulated five categories into which all religious experiences fall:

  • Public – a believer 'sees God's hand at work', whereas other explanations are possible e.g. looking at a beautiful sunset
  • Public – an unusual event that breaches natural law e.g. walking on water
  • Private – describable using normal language e.g. Jacob's vision of a ladder
  • Private – indescribable using normal language, usually a mystical experience e.g. "white did not cease to be white, nor black cease to be black, but black became white and white became black."
  • Private – a non-specific, general feeling of God working in one's life.

Swinburne also suggested two principles for the assessment of religious experiences:

  • Principle of Credulity – with the absence of any reason to disbelieve it, one should accept what appears to be true e.g. if one sees someone walking on water, one should believe that it is occurring.
  • Principle of Testimony – with the absence of any reason to disbelieve them, one should accept that eyewitnesses or believers are telling the truth when they testify about religious experiences.

Related terms edit

  • Ecstasy, trance – In ecstasy the believer is understood to have a soul or spirit which can leave the body. In ecstasy the focus is on the soul leaving the body and to experience transcendental realities. This type of religious experience is characteristic for the shaman.[11]
  • Enthusiasm – In enthusiasm – or possession – God is understood to be outside, other than or beyond the believer. A sacred power, being or will enters the body or mind of an individual and possesses it. A person capable of being possessed is sometimes called a medium. The deity, spirit or power uses such a person to communicate to the immanent world. Lewis argues that ecstasy and possession are basically one and the same experience, ecstasy being merely one form which possession may take. The outward manifestation of the phenomenon is the same in that shamans appear to be possessed by spirits, act as their mediums, and even though they claim to have mastery over them, can lose that mastery.[12][13]
  • Mystical experience – Mystical experiences are in many ways the opposite of numinous experiences. In the mystical experience, all 'otherness' disappear and the believer becomes one with the transcendent. The believer discovers that he or she is not distinct from the cosmos, the deity or the other reality, but one with it. Zaehner has identified two distinctively different mystical experiences: natural and religious mystical experiences.[9] Natural mystical experiences are, for example, experiences of the 'deeper self' or experiences of oneness with nature. Zaehner argues that the experiences typical of 'natural mysticism' are quite different from the experiences typical of religious mysticism.[9] Natural mystical experiences are not considered to be religious experiences because they are not linked to a particular tradition, but natural mystical experiences are spiritual experiences that can have a profound effect on the individual.
  • Spiritual awakening – A spiritual awakening usually involves a realization or opening to a sacred dimension of reality and may be a religious experience. Often a spiritual awakening has lasting effects upon one's life. It may refer to any of a wide range of experiences including being born again, near-death experiences, Liberation (moksha), and Enlightenment (bodhi).[14]

History of the concept edit

Origins edit

The notion of "religious experience" can be traced back to William James, who used the term "religious experience" in his book, The Varieties of Religious Experience.[15] It is considered to be the classic work in the field, and references to James' ideas are common at professional conferences. James distinguished between institutional religion and personal religion. Institutional religion refers to the religious group or organization, and plays an important part in a society's culture. Personal religion, in which the individual has mystical experience, can be experienced regardless of the culture.

The origins of the use of this term can be dated further back.[2] In the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries, several historical figures put forth very influential views that religion and its beliefs can be grounded in experience itself. While Kant held that moral experience justified religious beliefs, John Wesley in addition to stressing individual moral exertion thought that the religious experiences in the Methodist movement (paralleling the Romantic Movement) were foundational to religious commitment as a way of life.[16]

Wayne Proudfoot traces the roots of the notion of "religious experience" to the German theologian Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768–1834), who argued that religion is based on a feeling of the infinite. The notion of "religious experience" was used by Schleiermacher and Albert Ritschl to defend religion against the growing scientific and secular critique, and defend the view that human (moral and religious) experience justifies religious beliefs.[2]

The notion of "religious experience" was adopted by many scholars of religion, of which William James was the most influential.[17][note 2]

A broad range of western and eastern movements have incorporated and influenced the emergence of the modern notion of "mystical experience", such as the Perennial philosophy, Transcendentalism, Universalism, the Theosophical Society, New Thought, Neo-Vedanta and Buddhist modernism.[21][22]

Perennial philosophy edit

According to the Perennial philosophy, the mystical experiences in all religions are essentially the same. It supposes that many, if not all of the world's great religions, have arisen around the teachings of mystics, including Buddha, Jesus, Lao Tze, and Krishna. It also sees most religious traditions describing fundamental mystical experience, at least esoterically. A major proponent in the 20th century was Aldous Huxley, who "was heavily influenced in his description by Vivekananda's neo-Vedanta and the idiosyncratic version of Zen exported to the west by D.T. Suzuki. Both of these thinkers expounded their versions of the perennialist thesis",[23] which they originally received from western thinkers and theologians.[24]

Existentialism edit

Søren Kierkegaard argued that dying to the world and possessions is a foundational aspect of religious experience in Christianity.[25]

Transcendentalism and Unitarian Universalism edit

Transcendentalism was an early 19th-century liberal Protestant movement, which was rooted in English and German Romanticism, the Biblical criticism of Herder and Schleiermacher, and the skepticism of Hume.[26] The Transcendentalists emphasised an intuitive, experiential approach of religion.[27] Following Schleiermacher,[28] an individual's intuition of truth was taken as the criterion for truth.[27] In the late 18th and early 19th century, the first translations of Hindu texts appeared, which were also read by the Transcendentalists, and influenced their thinking.[27] They also endorsed universalist and Unitarianist ideas, leading to Unitarian Universalism, the idea that there must be truth in other religions as well, since a loving God would redeem all living beings, not just Christians.[27][29]

Theosophical Society edit

The Theosophical Society was formed in 1875 by Helena Blavatsky, Henry Steel Olcott, William Quan Judge and others to advance the spiritual principles and search for Truth known as Theosophy.[30] The Theosophical Society has been highly influential in promoting interest, both in west and east, in a great variety of religious teachings:[30]

No single organization or movement has contributed so many components to the New Age Movement as the Theosophical Society ... It has been the major force in the dissemination of occult literature in the West in the twentieth century.

The Theosophical Society searched for 'secret teachings' in Asian religions. It has been influential on modernist streams in several Asian religions, notably Hindu reform movements, the revival of Theravada Buddhism, and D.T. Suzuki, who popularized the idea of enlightenment as insight into a timeless, transcendent reality.[31][32][21] Another example can be seen in Paul Brunton's A Search in Secret India, which introduced Ramana Maharshi to a western audience.

Orientalism and the "pizza effect" edit

The interplay between western and eastern notions of religion is an important factor in the development of modern mysticism. In the 19th century, when Asian countries were colonialised by western states, a process of cultural mimesis began.[24][21][2] In this process, Western ideas about religion, especially the notion of "religious experience" were introduced to Asian countries by missionaries, scholars and the Theosophical Society, and amalgamated in a new understanding of the Indian and Buddhist traditions. This amalgam was exported back to the West as 'authentic Asian traditions', and acquired a great popularity in the west. Due to this western popularity, it also gained authority back in India, Sri Lanka and Japan.[24][21][2]

The best-known representatives of this amalgamated tradition are Annie Besant (Theosophical Society), Swami Vivekenanda and Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan (Neo-Vedanta), Anagarika Dharmapala, a 19th-century Sri Lankan Buddhist activist who founded the Maha Bodhi Society, and D.T. Suzuki, a Japanese scholar and Zen Buddhist. A synonymous term for this broad understanding is nondualism. This mutual influence is also known as the pizza effect.

Criticism edit

The notion of "experience" has been criticised.[28][33][34]

"Religious empiricism" is seen as highly problematic[by whom?] and was – during the period in-between world wars – famously rejected by the theologian Karl Barth.[35] In the 20th century, religious as well as moral experience as justification for religious beliefs still held sway. Some influential modern scholars who held this liberal theological view were Charles Raven and the Oxford physicist/theologian Charles Coulson.[36]

Robert Sharf writes that "experience" is a typical Western term, which has found its way into Asian religiosity via western influences.[28][note 3] The notion of "experience" introduces a false notion of duality between "experiencer" and "experienced", whereas the essence of kensho is the realisation of the "non-duality" of observer and observed.[38][39] "Pure experience" does not exist; all experience is mediated by intellectual and cognitive activity.[40][41] The specific teachings and practices of a specific tradition may even determine what "experience" someone has, which means that this "experience" is not the proof of the teaching, but a result of the teaching.[1] A pure consciousness without concepts, reached by "cleansing the doors of perception",[note 4] would be an overwhelming chaos of sensory input without coherence.[43]

The American scholar of religion and philosopher of social science Jason Josephson Storm has also critiqued the definition and category of religious experience, especially when such experiences are used to define religion. He compares the appeal to experience to define religion to failed attempts to defend an essentialist definition of art by appeal to aesthetic experience, and implies that each category lacks a common psychological feature across all such experiences by which they may be defined.[44]

Causes edit

 
Meditation
 
Sufi whirling

Traditions offer a wide variety of religious practices to induce religious experiences:

Religious experiences may also be caused by the use of entheogens, such as:

Religious experiences may have neurophysiological origins. These are studied in the field of neurotheology, and the cognitive science of religion,[54] and include near-death experiences.[55] Causes may be:

Religious practices edit

Neoplatonism edit

Neoplatonism is the modern term for a school of religious and mystical philosophy that took shape in the 3rd century AD, founded by Plotinus and based on the teachings of Plato and earlier Platonists.

Neoplatonism teaches that along the same road by which it descended the soul must retrace its steps back to the supreme Good. It must first of all return to itself. This is accomplished by the practice of virtue, which aims at likeness to God, and leads up to God. By means of ascetic observances the human becomes once more a spiritual and enduring being, free from all sin. But there is still a higher attainment; it is not enough to be sinless, one must become "God" (see henosis). This is reached through contemplation of the primeval Being, the One – in other words, through an ecstatic approach to it.

It is only in a state of perfect passivity and repose that the soul can recognize and touch the primeval Being. Hence the soul must first pass through a spiritual curriculum. Beginning with the contemplation of corporeal things in their multiplicity and harmony, it then retires upon itself and withdraws into the depths of its own being, rising thence to the nous, the world of ideas. But even there it does not find the Highest, the One; it still hears a voice saying, "not we have made ourselves." The last stage is reached when, in the highest tension and concentration, beholding in silence and utter forgetfulness of all things, it is able as it were to lose itself. Then it may see God, the foundation of life, the source of being, the origin of all good, the root of the soul. In that moment it enjoys the highest indescribable bliss; it is as it were swallowed up of divinity, bathed in the light of eternity. Porphyry tells us that on four occasions during the six years of their intercourse Plotinus attained to this ecstatic union with God.

Alcoholics Anonymous Twelfth Step edit

The twelfth step of the Alcoholics Anonymous program states that "Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these steps, we tried to carry this message to alcoholics and to practice these principles in all our affairs".[59] The terms "spiritual experience" and "spiritual awakening" are used many times in The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous[60] which argues that a spiritual experience is needed to bring about recovery from alcoholism.[61]

Christianity edit

In Evangelical Christianity, becoming "Born Again" is understood to be essential for a Believer to enter Heaven upon death. The effect is life-changing, and can also be called a conversion experience.[citation needed]

Noting that religious experience should not be separated from care for one's neighbour, Pope Francis has observed that "there can be no true religious experience that is deaf to the cry of the world".[62]

Christian mysticism edit

 
Three early Methodist leaders, Charles Wesley, John Wesley, and Francis Asbury, portrayed in stained glass at the Memorial Chapel, Lake Junaluska, North Carolina

Christian doctrine generally maintains that God dwells in all Christians and that they can experience God directly through belief in Jesus,[63] Christian mysticism aspires to apprehend spiritual truths inaccessible through intellectual means, typically by emulation of Christ. William Inge divides this scala perfectionis into three stages: the "purgative" or ascetic stage, the "illuminative" or contemplative stage, and the third, "unitive" stage, in which God may be beheld "face to face."[64]

The third stage, usually called contemplation in the Western tradition, refers to the experience of oneself as united with God in some way. The experience of union varies, but it is first and foremost always associated with a reuniting with Divine love. The underlying theme here is that God, the perfect goodness,[65] is known or experienced at least as much by the heart as by the intellect since, in the words of 1 John 4:16: "God is love, and he who abides in love abides in God and God in him." Some approaches to classical mysticism would consider the first two phases as preparatory to the third, explicitly mystical experience; but others state that these three phases overlap and intertwine.

Hesychasm edit

Based on Christ's injunction in the Gospel of Matthew to "go into your closet to pray",[66] hesychasm in tradition has been the process of retiring inward by ceasing to register the senses, in order to achieve an experiential knowledge of God (see theoria).

The highest goal of the hesychast is the experiential knowledge of God. In the 14th century, the possibility of this experiential knowledge of God was challenged by a Calabrian monk, Barlaam, who, although he was formally a member of the Orthodox Church, had been trained in Western Scholastic theology. Barlaam asserted that our knowledge of God can only be propositional. The practice of the hesychasts was defended by St. Gregory Palamas.[citation needed]

Islam edit

While all Muslims believe that they are on the pathway to God and will become close to God in Paradise – after death and after the "Final Judgment" – Sufis believe that it is possible to become close to God and to experience this closeness while one is alive.[67]

The tariqa, the 'path' on which the mystics walk, has been defined as 'the path which comes out of the Shariah, for the main road is called shar, the path, tariq.' No mystical experience can be realized if the binding injunctions of the Shariah are not followed faithfully first. The tariqa however, is narrower and more difficult to walk. It leads the adept, called salik (wayfarer), in his suluk (wandering), through different stations (maqam) until he reaches his goal, the perfect tauhid, the existential confession that God is One.[68]

Buddhism edit

 
The Buddha demonstrating control over fire and water. Gandhara, 3rd century CE

In Theravada Buddhism practice is described in the threefold training of discipline (śīla), meditative concentration (samādhi), and transcendent wisdom (prajñā). Zen-Buddhism emphasises the sole practice of meditation, while Vajrayana Buddhism utilizes a wide variety of practices. While the main aim of meditation and prajna is to let go of attachments, it may also result in a comprehension of the Buddha-nature and the inherent lucidness of the mind.

Different varieties of religious experience are described in detail in the Śūraṅgama Sūtra. In its section on the fifty skandha-maras, each of the five skandhas has ten skandha-maras associated with it, and each skandha-mara is described in detail as a deviation from correct samādhi. These skandha-maras are also known as the "fifty skandha demons" in some English-language publications.[69]

It is also believed that supernormal abilities are developed from meditation, which are termed "higher knowledge" (abhijñā), or "spiritual power" (ṛddhi). One early description found in the Samyutta Nikaya, which mentions abilities such as:[70]

... he goes unhindered through a wall, through a rampart, through a mountain as though through space; he dives in and out of the earth as though it were water; he walks on water without sinking as though it were earth; seated cross-legged, he travels in space like a bird; with his hands he touches and strokes the moon and sun so powerful and mighty; he exercises mastery with the body as far as the brahmā world.

Hinduism edit

Building on European philosophers, Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan reduced religion "to the core experience of reality in its fundamental unity".[71] According to Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, "Hinduism is not just a faith. It is the union of reason and intuition that cannot be defined, but is only to be experienced."[72][citation needed] This emphasis on experience as validation of a religious worldview is a modern development, which started in the 19th century, and was introduced to Indian thought by western Unitarian missionaries.[22] It has been popularized in Neo-Vedanta (also known as neo-Hinduism), which has dominated the popular understanding of Hinduism since the 19th century.[22] It emphasizes mysticism.[73][74][75] Swami Vivekananda presented the teachings of Neo-Vedanta as radical nondualism, unity between all religions and all persons.[76][77]

Scientific study edit

Neuroscience edit

Early studies in the 1950s and 1960s attempted to use EEGs to study brain wave patterns correlated with spiritual states. During the 1980s Dr. Michael Persinger stimulated the temporal lobes of human subjects with a weak magnetic field.[78] His subjects claimed to have a sensation of "an ethereal presence in the room."[79] Some current studies use neuroimaging to localize brain regions active, or differentially active, during religious experiences.[80][81] These neuroimaging studies have implicated a number of brain regions, including the limbic system, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, superior parietal lobe, and caudate nucleus.[82][83][84] Based on the complex nature of religious experience, it is likely that they are mediated by an interaction of neural mechanisms that all add a small piece to the overall experience.[83]

Neuroscience of religion, also known as neurotheology, biotheology or spiritual neuroscience,[85] is the study of correlations of neural phenomena with subjective experiences of spirituality and hypotheses to explain these phenomena. Proponents of neurotheology claim that there is a neurological and evolutionary basis for subjective experiences traditionally categorized as spiritual or religious.[86]

The neuroscience of religion takes neural correlates as the basis of cognitive functions and religious experiences. These religious experiences are thereby emergent properties of neural correlates. This approach does not necessitate exclusion of the Self, but interprets the Self as influenced or otherwise acted upon by underlying neural mechanisms. Proponents argue that religious experience can be evoked through stimulus of specific brain regions and/or can be observed through measuring increase in activity of specific brain regions.[80][note 5]

According to the neurotheologist Andrew B. Newberg and two colleagues, neurological processes which are driven by the repetitive, rhythmic stimulation which is typical of human ritual, and which contribute to the delivery of transcendental feelings of connection to a universal unity.[clarification needed] They posit, however, that physical stimulation alone is not sufficient to generate transcendental unitive experiences. For this to occur they say there must be a blending of the rhythmic stimulation with ideas. Once this occurs "...ritual turns a meaningful idea into a visceral experience."[89] Moreover, they say that humans are compelled to act out myths by the biological operations of the brain due to what they call the "inbuilt tendency of the brain to turn thoughts into actions."

An alternate approach is influenced by personalism, and exists contra-parallel to the reductionist approach. It focuses on the Self as the object of interest,[note 6] the same object of interest as in religion.[citation needed] According to Patrick McNamara, a proponent of personalism, the Self is a neural entity that controls rather than consists of the cognitive functions being processed in brain regions.[91][92]

A biological basis for religious experience may exist.[92][93] References to the supernatural or mythical beings first appeared approximately 40,000 years ago.[94][95] A popular theory posits that dopaminergic brain systems are the evolutionary basis for human intellect[96][95] and more specifically abstract reasoning.[95] The capacity for religious thought arises from the capability to employ abstract reasoning. There is no evidence to support the theory that abstract reasoning, generally or with regard to religious thought, evolved independent of the dopaminergic axis.[95] Religious behavior has been linked to "extrapersonal brain systems that predominate the ventromedial cortex and rely heavily on dopaminergic transmission."[95] A biphasic effect exists with regard to activation of the dopaminergic axis and/or ventromedial cortex. While mild activation can evoke a perceived understanding of the supernatural, extreme activation can lead to delusions characteristic of psychosis.[95] Stress can cause the depletion of 5-hydroxytryptamine, also referred to as serotonin.[97] The ventromedial 5-HT axis is involved in peripersonal activities such as emotional arousal, social skills, and visual feedback.[95] When 5-HT is decreased or depleted, one may become subject to "incorrect attributions of self-initiated or internally generated activity (e.g. hallucinations)."[98]

Psychiatry and neurology edit

A 2011 paper suggested that psychiatric conditions associated with psychotic spectrum symptoms may be possible explanations for revelatory driven experiences and activities such as those of Abraham, Moses, Jesus and Saint Paul.[99]

Temporal lobe epilepsy has become a popular field of study due to its correlation to religious experience.[100][101][102][103] Religious experiences and hyperreligiosity are often used to characterize those with temporal lobe epilepsy.[104][105] Visionary religious experiences, and momentary lapses of consciousness, may point toward a diagnosis of Geschwind syndrome. More generally, the symptoms are consistent with features of temporal lobe epilepsy, not an uncommon feature in religious icons and mystics.[106] It seems that this phenomenon is not exclusive to TLE, but can manifest in the presence of other epileptic variates[107][108][95] as well as mania, obsessive-compulsive disorder,[109] and schizophrenia, conditions characterized by ventromedial dopaminergic dysfunction.[95]

Psychedelic drugs edit

A number of studies by Roland R. Griffiths and other researchers have concluded that high doses of psilocybin and other classic psychedelics trigger mystical experiences in most research participants.[52][110][111][112] Mystical experiences have been measured by a number of psychometric scales, including the Hood Mysticism Scale, the Spiritual Transcendence Scale, and the Mystical Experience Questionnaire.[112] The revised version of the Mystical Experience Questionnaire, for example, asks participants about four dimensions of their experience, namely the "mystical" quality, positive mood such as the experience of amazement, the loss of the usual sense of time and space, and the sense that the experience cannot be adequately conveyed through words.[112] The questions on the "mystical" quality in turn probe multiple aspects: the sense of "pure" being, the sense of unity with one's surroundings, the sense that what one experienced was real, and the sense of sacredness.[112] Some researchers have questioned the interpretation of the results from these studies and whether the framework and terminology of mysticism are appropriate in a scientific context, while other researchers have responded to those criticisms and argued that descriptions of mystical experiences are compatible with a scientific worldview.[113][114][115]

Integrating religious experience edit

Several psychologists have proposed models in which religious experiences are part of a process of transformation of the self.

Carl Jung's work on himself and his patients convinced him that life has a spiritual purpose beyond material goals. One's main task, he believed, is to discover and fulfil deep innate potential, much as the acorn contains the potential to become the oak, or the caterpillar to become the butterfly. Based on his study of Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism, Gnosticism, Taoism, and other traditions, Jung perceived that this journey of transformation is at the mystical heart of all religions. It is a journey to meet the self and at the same time to meet the Divine. Unlike Sigmund Freud, Jung thought spiritual experience was essential to well-being.[116]

The notion of the numinous was an important concept in the writings of Carl Jung. Jung regarded numinous experiences as fundamental to an understanding of the individuation process because of their association with experiences of synchronicity in which the presence of archetypes is felt.[117][118]

McNamara proposes that religious experiences may help in "decentering" the self, and transform it into an integral self which is closer to an ideal self.[119]

Transpersonal psychology is a school of psychology that studies the transpersonal, self-transcendent or spiritual aspects of the human experience. The Journal of Transpersonal Psychology describes transpersonal psychology as "the study of humanity’s highest potential, and with the recognition, understanding, and realization of unitive, spiritual, and transcendent states of consciousness".[120] Issues considered in transpersonal psychology include spiritual self-development, peak experiences, mystical experiences, systemic trance and other metaphysical experiences of living.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Such study may be said to have begun with the American psychologist and philosopher William James in his 1901/02 Gifford Lectures later published as The Varieties of Religious Experience.
  2. ^ James also gives descriptions of conversion experiences. The Christian model of dramatic conversions, based on the role-model of Paul's conversion, may also have served as a model for Western interpretations and expectations regarding "enlightenment", similar to Protestant influences on Theravada Buddhism, as described by Carrithers: "It rests upon the notion of the primacy of religious experiences, preferably spectacular ones, as the origin and legitimation of religious action. But this presupposition has a natural home, not in Buddhism, but in Christian and especially Protestant Christian movements which prescribe a radical conversion."[18] See Sekida for an example of this influence of William James and Christian conversion stories, mentioning Luther[19] and St. Paul.[20] See also McMahan for the influence of Christian thought on Buddhism.[21]
  3. ^ Robert Sharf: "[T]he role of experience in the history of Buddhism has been greatly exaggerated in contemporary scholarship. Both historical and ethnographic evidence suggests that the privileging of experience may well be traced to certain twentieth-century reform movements, notably those that urge a return to zazen or vipassana meditation, and these reforms were profoundly influenced by religious developments in the west [...] While some adepts may indeed experience "altered states" in the course of their training, critical analysis shows that such states do not constitute the reference point for the elaborate Buddhist discourse pertaining to the "path".[37]
  4. ^ William Blake: "If the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to man as it is, infinite. For man has closed himself up, till he sees all things thru' narrow chinks of his cavern."[42]
  5. ^ This is contrary to the view of William James and F.D.E. Schleiermacher who viewed religious experience as a "preconceptual, immediate affective event."[87][88]
  6. ^ According to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "[personalism] emphasizes the significance, uniqueness and inviolability of the person, as well as the person's essentially relational or communitarian dimension."[90]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Samy 1998, p. 80.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Sharf 2000.
  3. ^ Velkoborská, Kamila (12 October 2012). "Performers and Researchers in Neo–pagan Settings". Traditiones. 41 (1): 65–76. doi:10.3986/Traditio2012410106. ISSN 1855-6396.
  4. ^ Mayer, Gerhard A. (2013). "Spirituality and Extraordinary Experiences: Methodological Remarks and Some Empirical Findings". Journal of Empirical Theology. 26 (2): 188–206. doi:10.1163/15709256-12341272. ISSN 0922-2936.
  5. ^ philosophyofreligion.info n.d.
  6. ^ Batson, Schoenrade & Ventis 1993.
  7. ^ Otto 1972.
  8. ^ a b Habel, O'Donoghue & Maddox 1993.
  9. ^ a b c Charlesworth 1988.
  10. ^ Moore & Habel 1982.
  11. ^ Sapolsky 1998, p. 248.
  12. ^ Lewis 1996.
  13. ^ Sapolsky 1998, pp. 248–249.
  14. ^ "Spiritual Awakening and Enlightenment of your Soul". iPublishing. 13 December 2022.
  15. ^ Hori 1999, p. 47.
  16. ^ Barbour 1966, pp. 69, 79.
  17. ^ Sharf 2000, p. 271.
  18. ^ Carrithers 1983, p. 18.
  19. ^ Sekida 1985, pp. 196–197.
  20. ^ Sekida 1985, p. 251.
  21. ^ a b c d e McMahan 2008.
  22. ^ a b c King 1999.
  23. ^ King 2002, p. 163.
  24. ^ a b c King 2002.
  25. ^ Dunning 1995.
  26. ^ Goodman 2003.
  27. ^ a b c d Lewis n.d.
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Sources edit

Books edit

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Research papers edit

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  • Azari, N. P.; Nickel, J.; Wunderlich, G.; Niedeggen, M.; Hefter, H.; Tellmann, L.; Herzog, H.; Stoerig, P.; Birnbacher, D. (April 2001). "Neural correlates of religious experience". The European Journal of Neuroscience. 13 (8): 1649–1652. doi:10.1046/j.0953-816x.2001.01527.x. ISSN 0953-816X. PMID 11328359. S2CID 22241837.
  • Azari, Nina P.; Slors, Marc (2007). "From Brain Imaging Religious Experience to Explaining Religion: A Critique". Archive for the Psychology of Religion. 29: 67–85. doi:10.1163/008467207X188630. hdl:2066/39569. S2CID 2349432.
  • Barrett, Frederick S.; Johnson, Matthew W.; Griffiths, Roland R. (2015). "Validation of the revised Mystical Experience Questionnaire in experimental sessions with psilocybin". Journal of Psychopharmacology. 29 (11): 1182–1190. doi:10.1177/0269881115609019. PMC 5203697. PMID 26442957.
  • Barsuglia, Joseph; Davis, Alan K.; Palmer, Robert; Lancelotta, Rafael; Windham-Herman, Austin-Marley; Peterson, Kristel; Polanco, Martin; Grant, Robert; Griffiths, Roland R. (2018). "Intensity of Mystical Experiences Occasioned by 5-MeO-DMT and Comparison With a Prior Psilocybin Study". Frontiers in Psychology. 9: 2459. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02459. PMC 6292276. PMID 30574112.
  • Beauregard, M.; Paquette, V. (2006). "Neural correlates of a mystical experience in Carmelite nuns". Neuroscience Letters. 405 (3): 186–190. doi:10.1016/j.neulet.2006.06.060. PMID 16872743. S2CID 13563460.
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  • Breeksema, Joost J.; van Elk, Michiel (2021). "Working with Weirdness: A Response to "Moving Past Mysticism in Psychedelic Science"". ACS Pharmacology & Translational Science. 4 (4): 1471–1474. doi:10.1021/acsptsci.1c00149. PMC 8369678. PMID 34423279.
  • Devinsky, J.; Schachter, S. (2009). "Norman Geschwind's contribution to the understanding of behavioral changes in temporal lobe epilepsy: The February 1974 lecture". Epilepsy & Behavior. 15 (4): 417–24. doi:10.1016/j.yebeh.2009.06.006. PMID 19640791. S2CID 22179745.
  • Devinsky, O. (2003). "Religious experiences and epilepsy". Epilepsy & Behavior. 4 (1): 76–77. doi:10.1016/s1525-5050(02)00680-7. PMID 12609231. S2CID 32445013.
  • D'Onofrio, B.M.; Eaves, L.J.; Murrelle, L.; Maes, H.H.; Spilka, B. (1999). "Understanding biological and social influences on religious affiliation, attitudes, and behaviors: A behavior genetic perspective". Journal of Personality. 67 (6): 953–984. doi:10.1111/1467-6494.00079. PMID 10637988.
  • Dunning, Stephen (1995). "Love Is Not Enough: A Kierkegaardian Phenomenology Of Religious Experience". Faith and Philosophy: Journal of the Society of Christian Philosophers. 12 (1): 22–39. doi:10.5840/faithphil199512122.
  • Ellison, C. G.; Levin, J. S. (1998). "The Religion-Health Connection: Evidence, Theory, and Future Directions". Health Education & Behavior. 25 (6): 700–720. doi:10.1177/109019819802500603. PMID 9813743. S2CID 6835008.
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  • Griffiths, R. R.; Richards, W. A.; McCann, U.; Jesse, R. (7 July 2006). "Psilocybin can occasion mystical-type experiences having substantial and sustained personal meaning and spiritual significance". Psychopharmacology. 187 (3): 268–283. doi:10.1007/s00213-006-0457-5. PMID 16826400. S2CID 7845214.
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  • Koenig, H. G. (2009). "Research on religion, spirituality, and mental health: a review". The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. 54 (5): 283–291. doi:10.1177/070674370905400502. PMID 19497160. S2CID 14523984.
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  • Miller, Mandi M.; Strongman, Kenneth T. (2002). "The Emotional Effects of Music on Religious Experience: A Study of the Pentecostal-Charismatic Style of Music and Worship". Psychology of Music. 30: 8–27. doi:10.1177/0305735602301004. hdl:10092/104929. S2CID 145129077.
  • Mota-Rolim, Sergio A.; Bulkeley, Kelly; Campanelli, Stephany; Lobão-Soares, Bruno; de Araujo, Draulio B.; Ribeiro, Sidarta (2020). "The Dream of God: How Do Religion and Science See Lucid Dreaming and Other Conscious States During Sleep?". Frontiers in Psychology. 11. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2020.555731. ISSN 1664-1078. PMC 7573223. PMID 33123040.
  • Murray, Evan D.; Cunningham, Miles G.; Price, Bruce H. (September 2011). "The Role of Psychotic Disorders in Religious History Considered". Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences. American Psychiatric Association. 24 (4): 410–426. doi:10.1176/appi.neuropsych.11090214. ISSN 1545-7222. OCLC 823065628. PMID 23224447.
  • Newberg, A.; Alavi, A.; Baime, M.; Pourdehnad, M.; Santanna, J.; d'Aquili, E. (2001). "The measurement of regional cerebral blood flow during the complex cognitive task of meditation: A preliminary SPECT study". Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging. 106 (2): 113–122. doi:10.1016/s0925-4927(01)00074-9. PMID 11306250. S2CID 9230941.
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  • Sanders, James W.; Zijlmans, Josjan (2021). "Moving Past Mysticism in Psychedelic Science". ACS Pharmacology & Translational Science. 4 (3): 1253–1255. doi:10.1021/acsptsci.1c00097. PMC 8205234. PMID 34151217.
  • Schjoedt, Uffe (2011). "The neural correlates of religious experience". Religion. 41 (1): 91–95. doi:10.1080/0048721x.2011.553132. S2CID 144891004.
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Other edit

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  • Charlesworth, Max (1988), Religious experience. Unit A. Study guide 2 (Deakin University)
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  • Heffern, Rich (20 April 2001). "Exploring the biology of religious experience". NCR online.
  • Hitt, Jack (1 November 1999). "This Is Your Brain on God". Wired.
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  • Williams, Thomas D.; Bengtsson, Jan Olof (2016). "Personalism". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2016 ed.). Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University.

Further reading edit

  • Batson, C. D., & Ventis, W. L. (1982). The religious experience: A social-psychological perspective. New York: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-503030-3
  • Dein, Simon (2011), Religious experience: perspectives and research paradigms 2016-03-05 at the Wayback Machine, WCPRR June 2011: 3-9
  • Giussani, Luigi (1997). The Religious Sense. Mcgill Queens Univ Press, ISBN 978-0773516267
  • James, William (1985) [1902]. The Varieties of Religious Experience. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674932258.
  • McNamara, Patrick, ed. (2006). Where God and Science Meet: How Brain and Evolutionary Studies Alter Our Understanding of Religion. 3 volumes. Westport, CT: Praeger.
  • McNamara, Patrick (2022). The Cognitive Neuroscience of Religious Experience: Decentering and the Self (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781108973496. ISBN 9781108833172. S2CID 249321868.
  • Richards, William A. (2016). Sacred Knowledge: Psychedelics and Religious Experiences. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-54091-9.
  • Taves, Ann (1999). Fits, Trances, and Visions: Experiencing Religion and Explaining Experience from Wesley to James. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691010243.
  • Yaden, David B.; Newberg, Andrew B. (2022). The Varieties of Spiritual Experience: 21st Century Research and Perspectives. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190665678.

External links edit

  • Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Religious Experience
  • Article from the Institute for the Biocultural Study of Religion
  • National Geographic explores the uses of Ayahuasca in Shamanic healing
  • Is This Your Brain On God? (May 2009 week long NPR series)

religious, experience, wayne, proudfoot, book, religious, experience, book, religious, experience, sometimes, known, spiritual, experience, sacred, experience, mystical, experience, subjective, experience, which, interpreted, within, religious, framework, conc. For the Wayne Proudfoot book see Religious Experience book A religious experience sometimes known as a spiritual experience sacred experience mystical experience is a subjective experience which is interpreted within a religious framework 1 The concept originated in the 19th century as a defense against the growing rationalism of Western society 2 William James popularised the concept 2 In some religions this may result in unverified personal gnosis 3 4 Many religious and mystical traditions see religious experiences particularly the knowledge which comes with them as revelations caused by divine agency rather than ordinary natural processes They are considered real encounters with God or gods or real contact with higher order realities of which humans are not ordinarily aware 5 Skeptics may hold that religious experience is an evolved feature of the human brain amenable to normal scientific study note 1 The commonalities and differences between religious experiences across different cultures have enabled scholars to categorize them for academic study 6 Contents 1 Definitions 1 1 William James 1 2 Rudolf Otto 1 3 Norman Habel 1 4 Richard Swinburne 2 Related terms 3 History of the concept 3 1 Origins 3 1 1 Perennial philosophy 3 1 2 Existentialism 3 1 3 Transcendentalism and Unitarian Universalism 3 1 4 Theosophical Society 3 1 5 Orientalism and the pizza effect 3 2 Criticism 4 Causes 5 Religious practices 5 1 Neoplatonism 5 2 Alcoholics Anonymous Twelfth Step 5 3 Christianity 5 3 1 Christian mysticism 5 3 2 Hesychasm 5 4 Islam 5 5 Buddhism 5 6 Hinduism 6 Scientific study 6 1 Neuroscience 6 2 Psychiatry and neurology 6 3 Psychedelic drugs 7 Integrating religious experience 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Sources 11 1 Books 11 2 Research papers 11 3 Other 12 Further reading 13 External linksDefinitions editWilliam James edit Psychologist and philosopher William James 1842 1910 described four characteristics of mystical experience in The Varieties of Religious Experience 1901 1902 According to James such an experience is Transient the experience is temporary the individual soon returns to a normal frame of mind Feels outside normal perception of space and time Ineffable the experience cannot be adequately put into words Noetic the individual feels that he or she has learned something valuable from the experience Feels to have gained knowledge that is normally hidden from human understanding Passive the experience happens to the individual largely without conscious control Although there are activities such as meditation see below that can make religious experience more likely it is not something that can be turned on and off at will Rudolf Otto edit The German philosopher and theologian Rudolf Otto 1869 1937 argues that there is one common factor to all religious experience independent of the cultural background In his book The Idea of the Holy 1923 he identifies this factor as the numinous The numinous experience has two aspects mysterium tremendum which is the tendency to invoke fear and trembling mysterium fascinans the tendency to attract fascinate and compel The numinous experience also has a personal quality to it in that the person feels to be in communion with a holy other Otto sees the numinous as the only possible religious experience He states There is no religion in which it the numinous does not live as the real innermost core and without it no religion would be worthy of the name 7 Otto does not take any other kind of religious experience such as ecstasy and enthusiasm seriously and is of the opinion that they belong to the vestibule of religion Norman Habel edit Biblical scholar Norman Habel defines religious experiences as the structured way in which a believer enters into a relationship with or gains an awareness of the sacred within the context of a particular religious tradition 8 Religious experiences are by their very nature preternatural that is out of the ordinary or beyond the natural order of things They may be difficult to distinguish observationally from psychopathological states such as psychoses or other forms of altered awareness 9 Not all preternatural experiences are considered to be religious experiences Following Habel s definition psychopathological states or drug induced states of awareness are not considered to be religious experiences because they are mostly not performed within the context of a particular religious tradition Moore and Habel identify two classes of religious experiences the immediate and the mediated religious experience 10 Mediated In the mediated experience the believer experiences the sacred through mediators such as rituals special persons religious groups totemic objects or the natural world 8 Immediate The immediate experience comes to the believer without any intervening agency or mediator The deity or divine is experienced directly Richard Swinburne edit In his book Faith and Reason the philosopher Richard Swinburne formulated five categories into which all religious experiences fall Public a believer sees God s hand at work whereas other explanations are possible e g looking at a beautiful sunset Public an unusual event that breaches natural law e g walking on water Private describable using normal language e g Jacob s vision of a ladder Private indescribable using normal language usually a mystical experience e g white did not cease to be white nor black cease to be black but black became white and white became black Private a non specific general feeling of God working in one s life Swinburne also suggested two principles for the assessment of religious experiences Principle of Credulity with the absence of any reason to disbelieve it one should accept what appears to be true e g if one sees someone walking on water one should believe that it is occurring Principle of Testimony with the absence of any reason to disbelieve them one should accept that eyewitnesses or believers are telling the truth when they testify about religious experiences Related terms editEcstasy trance In ecstasy the believer is understood to have a soul or spirit which can leave the body In ecstasy the focus is on the soul leaving the body and to experience transcendental realities This type of religious experience is characteristic for the shaman 11 Enthusiasm In enthusiasm or possession God is understood to be outside other than or beyond the believer A sacred power being or will enters the body or mind of an individual and possesses it A person capable of being possessed is sometimes called a medium The deity spirit or power uses such a person to communicate to the immanent world Lewis argues that ecstasy and possession are basically one and the same experience ecstasy being merely one form which possession may take The outward manifestation of the phenomenon is the same in that shamans appear to be possessed by spirits act as their mediums and even though they claim to have mastery over them can lose that mastery 12 13 Mystical experience Mystical experiences are in many ways the opposite of numinous experiences In the mystical experience all otherness disappear and the believer becomes one with the transcendent The believer discovers that he or she is not distinct from the cosmos the deity or the other reality but one with it Zaehner has identified two distinctively different mystical experiences natural and religious mystical experiences 9 Natural mystical experiences are for example experiences of the deeper self or experiences of oneness with nature Zaehner argues that the experiences typical of natural mysticism are quite different from the experiences typical of religious mysticism 9 Natural mystical experiences are not considered to be religious experiences because they are not linked to a particular tradition but natural mystical experiences are spiritual experiences that can have a profound effect on the individual Spiritual awakening A spiritual awakening usually involves a realization or opening to a sacred dimension of reality and may be a religious experience Often a spiritual awakening has lasting effects upon one s life It may refer to any of a wide range of experiences including being born again near death experiences Liberation moksha and Enlightenment bodhi 14 History of the concept editOrigins edit The notion of religious experience can be traced back to William James who used the term religious experience in his book The Varieties of Religious Experience 15 It is considered to be the classic work in the field and references to James ideas are common at professional conferences James distinguished between institutional religion and personal religion Institutional religion refers to the religious group or organization and plays an important part in a society s culture Personal religion in which the individual has mystical experience can be experienced regardless of the culture The origins of the use of this term can be dated further back 2 In the 18th 19th and 20th centuries several historical figures put forth very influential views that religion and its beliefs can be grounded in experience itself While Kant held that moral experience justified religious beliefs John Wesley in addition to stressing individual moral exertion thought that the religious experiences in the Methodist movement paralleling the Romantic Movement were foundational to religious commitment as a way of life 16 Wayne Proudfoot traces the roots of the notion of religious experience to the German theologian Friedrich Schleiermacher 1768 1834 who argued that religion is based on a feeling of the infinite The notion of religious experience was used by Schleiermacher and Albert Ritschl to defend religion against the growing scientific and secular critique and defend the view that human moral and religious experience justifies religious beliefs 2 The notion of religious experience was adopted by many scholars of religion of which William James was the most influential 17 note 2 A broad range of western and eastern movements have incorporated and influenced the emergence of the modern notion of mystical experience such as the Perennial philosophy Transcendentalism Universalism the Theosophical Society New Thought Neo Vedanta and Buddhist modernism 21 22 Perennial philosophy edit Main article Perennial philosophy According to the Perennial philosophy the mystical experiences in all religions are essentially the same It supposes that many if not all of the world s great religions have arisen around the teachings of mystics including Buddha Jesus Lao Tze and Krishna It also sees most religious traditions describing fundamental mystical experience at least esoterically A major proponent in the 20th century was Aldous Huxley who was heavily influenced in his description by Vivekananda s neo Vedanta and the idiosyncratic version of Zen exported to the west by D T Suzuki Both of these thinkers expounded their versions of the perennialist thesis 23 which they originally received from western thinkers and theologians 24 Existentialism edit Soren Kierkegaard argued that dying to the world and possessions is a foundational aspect of religious experience in Christianity 25 Transcendentalism and Unitarian Universalism edit Main articles Transcendentalism and Universalism Transcendentalism was an early 19th century liberal Protestant movement which was rooted in English and German Romanticism the Biblical criticism of Herder and Schleiermacher and the skepticism of Hume 26 The Transcendentalists emphasised an intuitive experiential approach of religion 27 Following Schleiermacher 28 an individual s intuition of truth was taken as the criterion for truth 27 In the late 18th and early 19th century the first translations of Hindu texts appeared which were also read by the Transcendentalists and influenced their thinking 27 They also endorsed universalist and Unitarianist ideas leading to Unitarian Universalism the idea that there must be truth in other religions as well since a loving God would redeem all living beings not just Christians 27 29 Theosophical Society edit Main article Theosophical Society See also Vipassana movement Hindu reform movements and Buddhist modernism The Theosophical Society was formed in 1875 by Helena Blavatsky Henry Steel Olcott William Quan Judge and others to advance the spiritual principles and search for Truth known as Theosophy 30 The Theosophical Society has been highly influential in promoting interest both in west and east in a great variety of religious teachings 30 No single organization or movement has contributed so many components to the New Age Movement as the Theosophical Society It has been the major force in the dissemination of occult literature in the West in the twentieth century The Theosophical Society searched for secret teachings in Asian religions It has been influential on modernist streams in several Asian religions notably Hindu reform movements the revival of Theravada Buddhism and D T Suzuki who popularized the idea of enlightenment as insight into a timeless transcendent reality 31 32 21 Another example can be seen in Paul Brunton s A Search in Secret India which introduced Ramana Maharshi to a western audience Orientalism and the pizza effect edit Main articles Pizza effect Neo Vedanta and Buddhist modernism The interplay between western and eastern notions of religion is an important factor in the development of modern mysticism In the 19th century when Asian countries were colonialised by western states a process of cultural mimesis began 24 21 2 In this process Western ideas about religion especially the notion of religious experience were introduced to Asian countries by missionaries scholars and the Theosophical Society and amalgamated in a new understanding of the Indian and Buddhist traditions This amalgam was exported back to the West as authentic Asian traditions and acquired a great popularity in the west Due to this western popularity it also gained authority back in India Sri Lanka and Japan 24 21 2 The best known representatives of this amalgamated tradition are Annie Besant Theosophical Society Swami Vivekenanda and Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan Neo Vedanta Anagarika Dharmapala a 19th century Sri Lankan Buddhist activist who founded the Maha Bodhi Society and D T Suzuki a Japanese scholar and Zen Buddhist A synonymous term for this broad understanding is nondualism This mutual influence is also known as the pizza effect Criticism edit The notion of experience has been criticised 28 33 34 Religious empiricism is seen as highly problematic by whom and was during the period in between world wars famously rejected by the theologian Karl Barth 35 In the 20th century religious as well as moral experience as justification for religious beliefs still held sway Some influential modern scholars who held this liberal theological view were Charles Raven and the Oxford physicist theologian Charles Coulson 36 Robert Sharf writes that experience is a typical Western term which has found its way into Asian religiosity via western influences 28 note 3 The notion of experience introduces a false notion of duality between experiencer and experienced whereas the essence of kensho is the realisation of the non duality of observer and observed 38 39 Pure experience does not exist all experience is mediated by intellectual and cognitive activity 40 41 The specific teachings and practices of a specific tradition may even determine what experience someone has which means that this experience is not the proof of the teaching but a result of the teaching 1 A pure consciousness without concepts reached by cleansing the doors of perception note 4 would be an overwhelming chaos of sensory input without coherence 43 The American scholar of religion and philosopher of social science Jason Josephson Storm has also critiqued the definition and category of religious experience especially when such experiences are used to define religion He compares the appeal to experience to define religion to failed attempts to defend an essentialist definition of art by appeal to aesthetic experience and implies that each category lacks a common psychological feature across all such experiences by which they may be defined 44 Causes edit nbsp Meditation nbsp Sufi whirlingTraditions offer a wide variety of religious practices to induce religious experiences Extended exercise often running in a large communal circle which is used in various tribal and neo pagan religions Prayer 45 Music 46 Dance such as Sufi whirling Meditation 47 Meditative practices are used to calm the mind and attain states of consciousness such as nirvikalpa samadhi Meditation can be focused on the breath concepts mantras 48 symbols Questioning or investigating self representations cognitive schemata such as Self enquiry Hua Tou practice and Douglas Harding s on having no head Lucid dreaming 49 Religious experiences may also be caused by the use of entheogens such as Ayahuasca DMT 50 Salvia divinorum salvinorin A Peyote mescaline 51 Psilocybin mushrooms psilocybin 52 Amanita muscaria muscimol Cannabis LSD MDMA 53 Soma KetamineReligious experiences may have neurophysiological origins These are studied in the field of neurotheology and the cognitive science of religion 54 and include near death experiences 55 Causes may be Temporal lobe epilepsy 56 as described in the Geschwind syndrome Stroke 57 Profound depression 58 or schizophreniaReligious practices editNeoplatonism edit Neoplatonism is the modern term for a school of religious and mystical philosophy that took shape in the 3rd century AD founded by Plotinus and based on the teachings of Plato and earlier Platonists Neoplatonism teaches that along the same road by which it descended the soul must retrace its steps back to the supreme Good It must first of all return to itself This is accomplished by the practice of virtue which aims at likeness to God and leads up to God By means of ascetic observances the human becomes once more a spiritual and enduring being free from all sin But there is still a higher attainment it is not enough to be sinless one must become God see henosis This is reached through contemplation of the primeval Being the One in other words through an ecstatic approach to it It is only in a state of perfect passivity and repose that the soul can recognize and touch the primeval Being Hence the soul must first pass through a spiritual curriculum Beginning with the contemplation of corporeal things in their multiplicity and harmony it then retires upon itself and withdraws into the depths of its own being rising thence to the nous the world of ideas But even there it does not find the Highest the One it still hears a voice saying not we have made ourselves The last stage is reached when in the highest tension and concentration beholding in silence and utter forgetfulness of all things it is able as it were to lose itself Then it may see God the foundation of life the source of being the origin of all good the root of the soul In that moment it enjoys the highest indescribable bliss it is as it were swallowed up of divinity bathed in the light of eternity Porphyry tells us that on four occasions during the six years of their intercourse Plotinus attained to this ecstatic union with God Alcoholics Anonymous Twelfth Step edit The twelfth step of the Alcoholics Anonymous program states that Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these steps we tried to carry this message to alcoholics and to practice these principles in all our affairs 59 The terms spiritual experience and spiritual awakening are used many times in The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous 60 which argues that a spiritual experience is needed to bring about recovery from alcoholism 61 Christianity edit In Evangelical Christianity becoming Born Again is understood to be essential for a Believer to enter Heaven upon death The effect is life changing and can also be called a conversion experience citation needed Noting that religious experience should not be separated from care for one s neighbour Pope Francis has observed that there can be no true religious experience that is deaf to the cry of the world 62 Christian mysticism edit Main article Christian mysticism nbsp Three early Methodist leaders Charles Wesley John Wesley and Francis Asbury portrayed in stained glass at the Memorial Chapel Lake Junaluska North CarolinaChristian doctrine generally maintains that God dwells in all Christians and that they can experience God directly through belief in Jesus 63 Christian mysticism aspires to apprehend spiritual truths inaccessible through intellectual means typically by emulation of Christ William Inge divides this scala perfectionis into three stages the purgative or ascetic stage the illuminative or contemplative stage and the third unitive stage in which God may be beheld face to face 64 The third stage usually called contemplation in the Western tradition refers to the experience of oneself as united with God in some way The experience of union varies but it is first and foremost always associated with a reuniting with Divine love The underlying theme here is that God the perfect goodness 65 is known or experienced at least as much by the heart as by the intellect since in the words of 1 John 4 16 God is love and he who abides in love abides in God and God in him Some approaches to classical mysticism would consider the first two phases as preparatory to the third explicitly mystical experience but others state that these three phases overlap and intertwine Hesychasm edit Based on Christ s injunction in the Gospel of Matthew to go into your closet to pray 66 hesychasm in tradition has been the process of retiring inward by ceasing to register the senses in order to achieve an experiential knowledge of God see theoria The highest goal of the hesychast is the experiential knowledge of God In the 14th century the possibility of this experiential knowledge of God was challenged by a Calabrian monk Barlaam who although he was formally a member of the Orthodox Church had been trained in Western Scholastic theology Barlaam asserted that our knowledge of God can only be propositional The practice of the hesychasts was defended by St Gregory Palamas citation needed Islam edit While all Muslims believe that they are on the pathway to God and will become close to God in Paradise after death and after the Final Judgment Sufis believe that it is possible to become close to God and to experience this closeness while one is alive 67 The tariqa the path on which the mystics walk has been defined as the path which comes out of the Shariah for the main road is called shar the path tariq No mystical experience can be realized if the binding injunctions of the Shariah are not followed faithfully first The tariqa however is narrower and more difficult to walk It leads the adept called salik wayfarer in his suluk wandering through different stations maqam until he reaches his goal the perfect tauhid the existential confession that God is One 68 Buddhism edit nbsp The Buddha demonstrating control over fire and water Gandhara 3rd century CEIn Theravada Buddhism practice is described in the threefold training of discipline sila meditative concentration samadhi and transcendent wisdom prajna Zen Buddhism emphasises the sole practice of meditation while Vajrayana Buddhism utilizes a wide variety of practices While the main aim of meditation and prajna is to let go of attachments it may also result in a comprehension of the Buddha nature and the inherent lucidness of the mind Different varieties of religious experience are described in detail in the Suraṅgama Sutra In its section on the fifty skandha maras each of the five skandhas has ten skandha maras associated with it and each skandha mara is described in detail as a deviation from correct samadhi These skandha maras are also known as the fifty skandha demons in some English language publications 69 It is also believed that supernormal abilities are developed from meditation which are termed higher knowledge abhijna or spiritual power ṛddhi One early description found in the Samyutta Nikaya which mentions abilities such as 70 he goes unhindered through a wall through a rampart through a mountain as though through space he dives in and out of the earth as though it were water he walks on water without sinking as though it were earth seated cross legged he travels in space like a bird with his hands he touches and strokes the moon and sun so powerful and mighty he exercises mastery with the body as far as the brahma world Hinduism edit Building on European philosophers Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan reduced religion to the core experience of reality in its fundamental unity 71 According to Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan Hinduism is not just a faith It is the union of reason and intuition that cannot be defined but is only to be experienced 72 citation needed This emphasis on experience as validation of a religious worldview is a modern development which started in the 19th century and was introduced to Indian thought by western Unitarian missionaries 22 It has been popularized in Neo Vedanta also known as neo Hinduism which has dominated the popular understanding of Hinduism since the 19th century 22 It emphasizes mysticism 73 74 75 Swami Vivekananda presented the teachings of Neo Vedanta as radical nondualism unity between all religions and all persons 76 77 Scientific study editNeuroscience edit Further information Neuroscience of religion See also Cognitive science of religion Early studies in the 1950s and 1960s attempted to use EEGs to study brain wave patterns correlated with spiritual states During the 1980s Dr Michael Persinger stimulated the temporal lobes of human subjects with a weak magnetic field 78 His subjects claimed to have a sensation of an ethereal presence in the room 79 Some current studies use neuroimaging to localize brain regions active or differentially active during religious experiences 80 81 These neuroimaging studies have implicated a number of brain regions including the limbic system dorsolateral prefrontal cortex superior parietal lobe and caudate nucleus 82 83 84 Based on the complex nature of religious experience it is likely that they are mediated by an interaction of neural mechanisms that all add a small piece to the overall experience 83 Neuroscience of religion also known as neurotheology biotheology or spiritual neuroscience 85 is the study of correlations of neural phenomena with subjective experiences of spirituality and hypotheses to explain these phenomena Proponents of neurotheology claim that there is a neurological and evolutionary basis for subjective experiences traditionally categorized as spiritual or religious 86 The neuroscience of religion takes neural correlates as the basis of cognitive functions and religious experiences These religious experiences are thereby emergent properties of neural correlates This approach does not necessitate exclusion of the Self but interprets the Self as influenced or otherwise acted upon by underlying neural mechanisms Proponents argue that religious experience can be evoked through stimulus of specific brain regions and or can be observed through measuring increase in activity of specific brain regions 80 note 5 According to the neurotheologist Andrew B Newberg and two colleagues neurological processes which are driven by the repetitive rhythmic stimulation which is typical of human ritual and which contribute to the delivery of transcendental feelings of connection to a universal unity clarification needed They posit however that physical stimulation alone is not sufficient to generate transcendental unitive experiences For this to occur they say there must be a blending of the rhythmic stimulation with ideas Once this occurs ritual turns a meaningful idea into a visceral experience 89 Moreover they say that humans are compelled to act out myths by the biological operations of the brain due to what they call the inbuilt tendency of the brain to turn thoughts into actions An alternate approach is influenced by personalism and exists contra parallel to the reductionist approach It focuses on the Self as the object of interest note 6 the same object of interest as in religion citation needed According to Patrick McNamara a proponent of personalism the Self is a neural entity that controls rather than consists of the cognitive functions being processed in brain regions 91 92 A biological basis for religious experience may exist 92 93 References to the supernatural or mythical beings first appeared approximately 40 000 years ago 94 95 A popular theory posits that dopaminergic brain systems are the evolutionary basis for human intellect 96 95 and more specifically abstract reasoning 95 The capacity for religious thought arises from the capability to employ abstract reasoning There is no evidence to support the theory that abstract reasoning generally or with regard to religious thought evolved independent of the dopaminergic axis 95 Religious behavior has been linked to extrapersonal brain systems that predominate the ventromedial cortex and rely heavily on dopaminergic transmission 95 A biphasic effect exists with regard to activation of the dopaminergic axis and or ventromedial cortex While mild activation can evoke a perceived understanding of the supernatural extreme activation can lead to delusions characteristic of psychosis 95 Stress can cause the depletion of 5 hydroxytryptamine also referred to as serotonin 97 The ventromedial 5 HT axis is involved in peripersonal activities such as emotional arousal social skills and visual feedback 95 When 5 HT is decreased or depleted one may become subject to incorrect attributions of self initiated or internally generated activity e g hallucinations 98 Psychiatry and neurology edit See also Mental health of Jesus A 2011 paper suggested that psychiatric conditions associated with psychotic spectrum symptoms may be possible explanations for revelatory driven experiences and activities such as those of Abraham Moses Jesus and Saint Paul 99 Temporal lobe epilepsy has become a popular field of study due to its correlation to religious experience 100 101 102 103 Religious experiences and hyperreligiosity are often used to characterize those with temporal lobe epilepsy 104 105 Visionary religious experiences and momentary lapses of consciousness may point toward a diagnosis of Geschwind syndrome More generally the symptoms are consistent with features of temporal lobe epilepsy not an uncommon feature in religious icons and mystics 106 It seems that this phenomenon is not exclusive to TLE but can manifest in the presence of other epileptic variates 107 108 95 as well as mania obsessive compulsive disorder 109 and schizophrenia conditions characterized by ventromedial dopaminergic dysfunction 95 Psychedelic drugs edit Further information Psychedelic experience See also Ego death A number of studies by Roland R Griffiths and other researchers have concluded that high doses of psilocybin and other classic psychedelics trigger mystical experiences in most research participants 52 110 111 112 Mystical experiences have been measured by a number of psychometric scales including the Hood Mysticism Scale the Spiritual Transcendence Scale and the Mystical Experience Questionnaire 112 The revised version of the Mystical Experience Questionnaire for example asks participants about four dimensions of their experience namely the mystical quality positive mood such as the experience of amazement the loss of the usual sense of time and space and the sense that the experience cannot be adequately conveyed through words 112 The questions on the mystical quality in turn probe multiple aspects the sense of pure being the sense of unity with one s surroundings the sense that what one experienced was real and the sense of sacredness 112 Some researchers have questioned the interpretation of the results from these studies and whether the framework and terminology of mysticism are appropriate in a scientific context while other researchers have responded to those criticisms and argued that descriptions of mystical experiences are compatible with a scientific worldview 113 114 115 Integrating religious experience editSee also Training after kenshō Several psychologists have proposed models in which religious experiences are part of a process of transformation of the self Carl Jung s work on himself and his patients convinced him that life has a spiritual purpose beyond material goals One s main task he believed is to discover and fulfil deep innate potential much as the acorn contains the potential to become the oak or the caterpillar to become the butterfly Based on his study of Christianity Hinduism Buddhism Gnosticism Taoism and other traditions Jung perceived that this journey of transformation is at the mystical heart of all religions It is a journey to meet the self and at the same time to meet the Divine Unlike Sigmund Freud Jung thought spiritual experience was essential to well being 116 The notion of the numinous was an important concept in the writings of Carl Jung Jung regarded numinous experiences as fundamental to an understanding of the individuation process because of their association with experiences of synchronicity in which the presence of archetypes is felt 117 118 McNamara proposes that religious experiences may help in decentering the self and transform it into an integral self which is closer to an ideal self 119 Transpersonal psychology is a school of psychology that studies the transpersonal self transcendent or spiritual aspects of the human experience The Journal of Transpersonal Psychology describes transpersonal psychology as the study of humanity s highest potential and with the recognition understanding and realization of unitive spiritual and transcendent states of consciousness 120 Issues considered in transpersonal psychology include spiritual self development peak experiences mystical experiences systemic trance and other metaphysical experiences of living See also editArgument from religious experience Beatific vision Divine madness Higher consciousness Kundalini Nirvana Private revelation Psychology of religion Psychonautics Religious Experience Research Centre Self knowledge Spiritual crisis Spirit world Spiritualism Supernatural Transcendence religion Turiya Unverified personal gnosis Western esotericismNotes edit Such study may be said to have begun with the American psychologist and philosopher William James in his 1901 02 Gifford Lectures later published as The Varieties of Religious Experience James also gives descriptions of conversion experiences The Christian model of dramatic conversions based on the role model of Paul s conversion may also have served as a model for Western interpretations and expectations regarding enlightenment similar to Protestant influences on Theravada Buddhism as described by Carrithers It rests upon the notion of the primacy of religious experiences preferably spectacular ones as the origin and legitimation of religious action But this presupposition has a natural home not in Buddhism but in Christian and especially Protestant Christian movements which prescribe a radical conversion 18 See Sekida for an example of this influence of William James and Christian conversion stories mentioning Luther 19 and St Paul 20 See also McMahan for the influence of Christian thought on Buddhism 21 Robert Sharf T he role of experience in the history of Buddhism has been greatly exaggerated in contemporary scholarship Both historical and ethnographic evidence suggests that the privileging of experience may well be traced to certain twentieth century reform movements notably those that urge a return to zazen or vipassana meditation and these reforms were profoundly influenced by religious developments in the west While some adepts may indeed experience altered states in the course of their training critical analysis shows that such states do not constitute the reference point for the elaborate Buddhist discourse pertaining to the path 37 William Blake If the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to man as it is infinite For man has closed himself up till he sees all things thru narrow chinks of his cavern 42 This is contrary to the view of William James and F D E Schleiermacher who viewed religious experience as a preconceptual immediate affective event 87 88 According to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy personalism emphasizes the significance uniqueness and inviolability of the person as well as the person s essentially relational or communitarian dimension 90 References edit a b Samy 1998 p 80 a b c d e f Sharf 2000 Velkoborska Kamila 12 October 2012 Performers and Researchers in Neo pagan Settings Traditiones 41 1 65 76 doi 10 3986 Traditio2012410106 ISSN 1855 6396 Mayer Gerhard A 2013 Spirituality and Extraordinary Experiences Methodological Remarks and Some Empirical Findings Journal of Empirical Theology 26 2 188 206 doi 10 1163 15709256 12341272 ISSN 0922 2936 philosophyofreligion info n d Batson Schoenrade amp Ventis 1993 Otto 1972 a b Habel O Donoghue amp Maddox 1993 a b c Charlesworth 1988 Moore amp Habel 1982 Sapolsky 1998 p 248 Lewis 1996 Sapolsky 1998 pp 248 249 Spiritual Awakening and Enlightenment of your Soul iPublishing 13 December 2022 Hori 1999 p 47 Barbour 1966 pp 69 79 Sharf 2000 p 271 Carrithers 1983 p 18 Sekida 1985 pp 196 197 Sekida 1985 p 251 a b c d e McMahan 2008 a b c King 1999 King 2002 p 163 a b c King 2002 Dunning 1995 Goodman 2003 a b c d Lewis n d a b c Sharf 1995a Andrews 1999 a b Melton 1990 Sharf 1995c Shih 1953 Mohr 2000 pp 282 286 Low 2006 p 12 Barbour 1966 pp 114 116 119 Barbour 1966 pp 126 127 Sharf 1995b p 1 Hori 1994 p 30 Samy 1998 p 82 Mohr 2000 p 282 Samy 1998 pp 80 82 View Quote Quote DB Mohr 2000 p 284 Storm 2021 p 64 Heffern 2001 Miller amp Strongman 2002 Paulson 2006 Danielou 1951 Mota Rolim et al 2020 Watts 1968 Baggott 1996 a b Griffiths et al 2006 Adamson amp Metzner 1988 Van Eyghen 2020 Moody 1975 Tucker 2003 Taylor 2008 Katie 2003 p xi The Twelve Steps of AA Archived from the original on 2009 03 25 The Big Book Alcoholics Anonymous via Alcoholics Anonymous Appendix II Spiritual Experience PDF The Big Book Alcoholics Anonymous pp 567 568 via Alcoholics Anonymous Quoted by Catholic Bishops Conference of England and Wales Plenary Resolution Synod on Synodality published 17 November 2023 accessed 25 November 2023 John 7 16 39 Christian Mysticism 1899 Bampton Lectures Theologia Germanica public domain Matthew 6 5 6 King James Version Godlas n d Schimmel 1975 p 99 Epstein 1997 Bhikkhu Bodhi 2000 p 1727 Rinehart 2004 p 195 Radhakrishnan 1973 King 1999 p 171 Muesse 2011 pp 3 4 Doniger 2010 p 18 Irwin 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Psychedelics and Religious Experience California Law Review 56 1 74 85 doi 10 2307 3479497 JSTOR 3479497 Other edit Adamson Sophia Metzner Ralph 1988 The Nature of the MDMA Experience and Its Role in Healing Psychotherapy and Spiritual Practice maps org MAPS Retrieved 2018 12 16 Andrews Barry 12 March 1999 The Roots Of Unitarian Universalist Spirituality In New England Transcendentalism Archive uua org Archived from the original on 2013 09 21 Retrieved 2013 11 06 Baggott Matthew J 1996 A Note on the Safety of Peyote when Used Religiously Council on Spiritual Practices Archived from the original on 2017 12 25 Retrieved 2006 07 11 Biello David 3 October 2007 Searching for God in the Brain Scientific American Archived from the original on 2007 10 11 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Charlesworth Max 1988 Religious experience Unit A Study guide 2 Deakin University Gajilan A Chris 4 April 2007 Are humans hard wired for faith Cable News Network Retrieved 2007 04 09 Godlas A Sufism an Introduction Islam and Islamic Studies Resources University of Georgia Archived from the original on 2021 05 12 Retrieved 2022 01 20 Goodman Russell 2003 Transcendentalism Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 2013 11 06 Heffern Rich 20 April 2001 Exploring the biology of religious experience NCR online Hitt Jack 1 November 1999 This Is Your Brain on God Wired Lewis Jone Johnson What is Transcendentalism Transcendentalists com Archived from the original on 2013 12 09 Retrieved 2013 11 06 Melton Gordon J ed 1990 Theosophical Society New Age Encyclopedia Farmington Hills Michigan Gale Research pp 458 461 ISBN 0 8103 7159 6 Paulson Steve 20 September 2006 Divining the brain Salon com Retrieved 2006 09 20 The Argument from Religious Experience www philosophyofreligion info Archived from the original on 2016 02 23 Taylor Jill Bolte 2008 My Stroke of Insight TED Retrieved 2023 05 26 Tucker Liz 20 March 2003 God on the Brain BBC Retrieved 2003 03 20 Williams Thomas D Bengtsson Jan Olof 2016 Personalism In Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2016 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Further reading editBatson C D amp Ventis W L 1982 The religious experience A social psychological perspective New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 503030 3 Dein Simon 2011 Religious experience perspectives and research paradigms Archived 2016 03 05 at the Wayback Machine WCPRR June 2011 3 9 Giussani Luigi 1997 The Religious Sense Mcgill Queens Univ Press ISBN 978 0773516267 James William 1985 1902 The Varieties of Religious Experience Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674932258 McNamara Patrick ed 2006 Where God and Science Meet How Brain and Evolutionary Studies Alter Our Understanding of Religion 3 volumes Westport CT Praeger McNamara Patrick 2022 The Cognitive Neuroscience of Religious Experience Decentering and the Self 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781108973496 ISBN 9781108833172 S2CID 249321868 Richards William A 2016 Sacred Knowledge Psychedelics and Religious Experiences New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 54091 9 Taves Ann 1999 Fits Trances and Visions Experiencing Religion and Explaining Experience from Wesley to James Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691010243 Yaden David B Newberg Andrew B 2022 The Varieties of Spiritual Experience 21st Century Research and Perspectives New York NY Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190665678 External links editStanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Religious Experience Self transcendence enhanced by removal of portions of the parietal occipital cortex Article from the Institute for the Biocultural Study of Religion Peru Hell and Back National Geographic explores the uses of Ayahuasca in Shamanic healing Is This Your Brain On God May 2009 week long NPR series Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Religious experience amp oldid 1208848823, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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