monist experience
union with a divine spirit, sense of oneness with this divine spirit and with all things e.g. meditation
theist experience
God is felt as wholly other to the experiencer. Sense of distance and unworthiness in relation to God e.g. numinous
broad terms of mystical experiences
o More to reality than the physical
o Human condition allows for an intuitive understanding of the Divine
o Two distance natures: ego (conscious self) and spiritual eternal self (spark of divinity)
o Purpose is to discover your spiritual eternal self and unite with ‘Divine Ground’.
o Christian tradition of mystics: seeking an encounter with God through prayer. There is recognition that God will always remain unknowable.
visions and numinous
• Visions and Voices
o It is not always clear whether there is actual seeing/hearing
o There is difficult describing and interpreting
• Numinous
o Hard to define - sense of awe, wonder
f. c. happold and re experiences
o 1960s, people looking outside the authority of the traditional Xian Church to find meaning and truth
o Personal belief is the key focus
o Happold recognised mysticism as an underlying, universal aspect in all religions, with key dependence on intuition, rather than rational understanding.
o ‘A release of latent powers and a widening of vision, so that aspects of truth unplumbed by the rational intellect are revealed to him’.
teresa of avila
o Raised as a pious child
o Religious ecstasy through book ‘Third Spiritual Alphabet’ when ascetic works such as the Spiritual Exercises
o Often experienced a ‘blessing of tears’ when undertaking devotion, came to terms with her sin and absolute subjection to God.
o Deemed diabolical, starting inflicting pain on herself
o Began visions of JC, bodily form but invisible. A Seraph also drove the fiery point of a golden lance repeatedly through her heart = spiritual-bodily pain
o ‘He seemed to draw them out also, and to leave me all on fire with a great love of God’. Painful yet ‘sweet’ experience.
o Inspired herself and others, ‘lord, either let me suffer or let me die’
o Influenced other theologians e.g. Francis of Sales, Fénelon and the Port-Royalists
stages of conversion
o Individual dissatisfied with current situation
o Searching for truth
o Turmoil followed by clarity
o Sharing and enjoying new found peace and contentment
o A new direction towards a radical long term change in behaviour and attitude
o E.g. Conversion of Saul in Acts
william james background and example
o Background
• Attempted to be objective in his study of the psychology of religious experience.
• Pragmatic - tried to deal with things sensibly and realistically in a way that is based on practical rather than theoretical considerations.
o Gives the example of a man called S.H. Hadley, a drunk who felt a presence greater than him.
• After listening to testimonies of others, he converted to Christianity and felt he went from ‘indescribable doom’ to ‘glorious brightness’.
• He gave up alcohol and helped others do the same.
• An example of pragmatism - consequences of experiences can validate them for the experiencer.
william james and conversion
o Included a huge variety of different types of religious experience, including first hand accounts.
o He treated religious experiences sensitively and scientifically.
o Concluded that religious experiences have a ‘common core’, which transcends all experiences and cultures.
o Uses a posteriori reasoning, depends on inductive reasoning and whether the conclusion is the most plausible option.
james: ineffability
james: noetic quality
james: transience
james: passivity
• The experiences feel passive and thus the experience is happening to them - they are the recipient rather than the instigator.
criticisms of james
swinburne credulity
o Our way of understanding the world and our own experiences.
o We must trust our own experiences, as they are usually reliable.
o Even though experiences can be misleading, the balance of probability suggests we are usually correct in our understanding. If we didn’t we’d live in an ‘epistemological queer street’.
o Therefore, should trust re experiences as we trust our own.
swinburne testimony
o Just as we accept accounts of others of their everyday experiences, we should also accept their accounts of re experiences, unless we have good reason not to do so.
mackie criticism of swinburne
• Balance of probability for re experiences is actually the opposite of normal, everyday experiences. The probability of re experiences are lower, people may be mistaken.
Cultural conditioning – we believe that we are seeing/experiencing what we have been taught and told. In ‘Christian countries,’ Christian figures appear e.g. Mary, Jesus and God, but in ‘Hindu countries,’ Hindu religious figures appear to people who have religious experiences.
martin criticism of swinburne
caroline franks davis criticism of swinburne
richard gale criticism of swinburne
corporate experiences
solar miracle of fatima - more credible?
o Does the fact that we have cumulative evidence increase the credibility of the experience?
o More people = more witnesses, therefore increased weight in truth. In science, we take increased peer review as firmer truth, less subjective arguably?
o However, group hysteria and the issues with human psychological conformity.
o Must look at the credibility of the witnesses e.g. children may lie.
In his book, Nickell suggested that the crowd saw a sundog, a patch of light that sometimes appears beside the sun.
feuerbach re experiences as psychological
o Argued that humans have invented God to satisfy their psychological needs.
o The origins of re belief and experiences come from within the human mind.
o These are then projected outside the self and are held up as something to be worshipped.
o E.g. compassion, creativity are elements of human nature which we project onto a divine figure to achieve a sense of purpose.
freud re experiences as psychological
o Argued that re experiences are delusions based on humans’ need for a parent figure to look after them.
o Psyche has 3 layers: id, ego and superego.
o Superego is an inner moral voice telling us what is right/wrong, comes from society.
o When we are unable to cope with adult life, we mistake our superego for God in order to help us cope with our infantile neurosis.
- God is seen to be a father figure that is cushioning us from reality.