Does Mystical Experience Give Access to Reality?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Mystical Experience as Ontically Revelatory
I was standing among pine trees, looking out at the sky when, suddenly, ‘the heavens opened’ as it were, and caught me up. I was swept up and out of myself altogether, into a flood of white Glory. I had no sense of time or place. The ecstasy was terrific while it lasted. It could have lasted only a minute or two. It went as suddenly as it came. I found myself bathed with tears, but they were tears of joy. I felt ONE with everything and everybody; and somehow I knew that what I had experienced was Reality, and that Reality is Perfection.
I seemed to be part of some mighty essence, some ultimate, unknowable reality, to describe which I knew would be impossible because no earthly analogy could be applied to it. This was the ultimate truth of which all other realities were poor reflections. This was the essence of beauty, the essence of knowledge, the essence of wisdom, the deepest essence of understanding. There was nothing further I need know or try to know; this experience was all sufficient for all time, and all waking life, in comparison with it, was mere illusion: a drop of water in a mighty ocean, a second in an ageless cycle of centuries.
Mystical experience is experience in a religious context that is immediately or subsequently interpreted by the experiencer as a direct, unmediated encounter with ultimate divine reality. This experience engenders a deep sense of unity and suggests that during the experience the experiencer was living on a level of being other than the ordinary.
3. Mystical Experience as Ontically Irrelevant: Radical Contextualism
4. Mystical Experience as Ontically Irrelevant: Neuroscientific Reductionism
5. Mystical Experience and Metaphysics as Mutually Enriching
6. Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | For my initial advocacy of metaphysical inquiry in the study of mysticism, see Marshall (2005, pp. 14–16). Richard H. Jones (2016) devotes a chapter to mysticism and metaphysics in his comprehensive textbook, and F. Samuel Brainard (2000, 2017) has addressed the concept of reality in relation to mystical experiences and more generally too. Jeffrey J. Kripal (2019) raises various kinds of mind–body metaphysics in connection with experiences that transform (“flip”) worldviews. Andrew C. Papanicolaou (2021) has made an ambitious attempt to identify authentic core features of mystical experience and assess their claims to ontological validity. |
2 | Note that I do not use “reductionism” in a disapproving way. Ontological reduction of one thing to another (say, religious experience to sociological or biological factors) is perfectly acceptable as long as there is good reason to do so. As Robert Segal (1983, p. 114) observes, the truth of reductive approaches is “an open rather than a closed question, an empirical rather than a priori one.” The proof of the pudding is in the eating. |
3 | Ontic: “possessing the character of real rather than phenomenal existence” (Random House Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary). |
4 | It is this feeling of waking up to reality that has no doubt contributed to such increasingly popular terms as awakening experience (Taylor 2012) and spiritual awakening experience (Newberg and Waldman 2018) as alternatives to mystical experience. These and other labels, such as enlightenment experience, unitive experience, and nondual awareness, are not without issues of their own, if overly inclusive or exclusive, or carrying historical baggage of their own (e.g., Buddhist bodhi, awakening; Hindu advaita, nondual), or incorporating the term “spiritual,” which is just as tricky to pin down as “mystical” and has a similarly varied history (Bouyer 1981; Peng-Keller 2019; Berrios and Marková 2021). |
5 | For example, R. C. Zaehner (1957, pp. 198–99): mystical experiences are “praeternatural experiences in which sense perception and discursive thought are transcended in an immediate perception of a unity or union which is apprehended as lying beyond and transcending the multiplicity of the world as we know it.” W. T. Stace (1960b, pp. 14–15): “The most important, the central characteristic in which all fully developed mystical experiences agree, and which in the last analysis is definitive of them and serves to mark them off from other kinds of experiences, is that they involve the apprehension of an ultimate nonsensuous unity in all things, a oneness or a One to which neither the senses nor the reason can penetrate.” |
6 | It is with trepidation that I employ “essentialism,” so disgraced has the term become in the academy and liable to draw knee-jerk reactions. Carmody and Carmody (1996, pp. 6–10) use the term, contrasting it with “empiricism” (i.e., contextualism), although “relativism” and “pluralism” would be more apt for the claim that experiences are relative to the traditions in which they take place. Furthermore, radical contextualism paid little attention to the empirical data of mystical experience, focusing instead on comparative mystical doctrine. Carmody and Carmody explain that essentialism stresses sameness or similarity of experiences and human nature across cultures and historical periods, but they also recognize considerable variation among essentialists. Some—let’s call them radical essentialists—make the unsupportable claim that there is essentially just one mystical experience and it is common to all traditions and periods, whereas moderate essentialists give a more nuanced account, recognizing a variety of experiential types and a place for biopsychosocial contributions too. Furthermore, to avoid a very common confusion, a distinction is worth making between an essentialism that merely claims some cross-cultural, trans-historical commonalities of experience, practice, and transformational outcome, and a certain type of “perennialism” that makes the far bolder and difficult to sustain claim that there is a common core of mystical teachings across the world’s religions (Marshall 2014). The term “perennialism” itself has been applied to a variety of positions, as Sawyer (2021) points out, so care should be taken not to tar all perennialists with the same brush. Some perennialisms, such as Huxley’s, are close to essentialism, giving much more emphasis to commonality of experience than to common doctrine. On essentialism, see also Rose (2016) and Taylor (2017). Rose makes a strong case for commonalities across traditions in the contemplative journey, and Taylor raises several empirical studies that have suggested cross-cultural experiential commonalities. An alternative to “essentialism” and “essentialist” would be advantageous, to avoid misleading associations and polemical reactions. One possibility would be to contrast “commonality thesis” and “commonality theorist” with “plurality thesis” and “plurality theorist." The former emphasizes commonalities of experience (and other factors), while the latter emphasizes plurality/relativity of experience. |
7 | For examples of this kind of self-experience, see Marshall (2019, pp. 89–91). |
8 | Glenn Alexander Magee’s (2021) chapter on a neo-Hegelian approach to mystical and psychical phenomena is nicely complemented by Anthony Perovich’s (2021) article on F. H. Bradley’s absolute idealism and mystical experience. |
9 | For this term, I am indebted to Carhart-Harris and Friston (2019), who strive for a naturalistic, woo-free approach to psychedelic research. |
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Marshall, P. Does Mystical Experience Give Access to Reality? Religions 2022, 13, 983. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100983
Marshall P. Does Mystical Experience Give Access to Reality? Religions. 2022; 13(10):983. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100983
Chicago/Turabian StyleMarshall, Paul. 2022. "Does Mystical Experience Give Access to Reality?" Religions 13, no. 10: 983. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100983
APA StyleMarshall, P. (2022). Does Mystical Experience Give Access to Reality? Religions, 13(10), 983. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100983