I think these experiences work by doing something to impair our normal sensory processing and mental schema of reality that allows us to perceive the really real that is always there
Here’s my theory: that since an atheist or a non-spiritual person can take a pill or snort or inject something or have a heart attack and experience a profound mystical experience, then it means mystical insight and divine illumination of our minds and hearts exists apart from belief or religion. — MysticMonist
The atheist, non-religious, non-spiritual, unreflective, not very thoughtful lump can't count on a short cut to depth and profundity. Neither can the religious, spiritual, reflective person. — Bitter Crank
But also I don’t have the control I do with meditation or hypnosis. I can exit a trance like state or vision whenever I want, i can’t become sober as easily. — MysticMonist
I’m actually not that knowledgeable about hypnosis, but I think the basics is relaxation plus focus, right? — MysticMonist
Au contraire, one can have a stroke of insight. — praxis
I think these experiences work by doing something to impair our normal sensory processing and mental schema of reality that allows us to perceive the really real that is always there. Our minds are conditioned on mundane things because spiritual insight won’t help you buy dinner. As Zen, says it’s not worth anything. But if we break down that regular function sometimes we gain insight. Other times like with schizophrenia, that processing becomes overactive and you get a jumbled mess with zero deeper meaning. So impairment doesn’t always equal insight. — MysticMonist
The only way this type of brain science refutes my claim of illumination is to say that all experiences of transcendence or spirituality (drug, stroke, or prayer induced) are straight up delusion. — MysticMonist
I would say that meditation in its fullest sense though is about a lot more than just sitting on a cushion. It’s a comprehensive way of life and self-renunciation. — MysticMonist
I don’t think hypnotism teaches this. — MysticMonist
I still think we are dealing with more than just left and right brain thinking. Maybe an intuitive grasp of a transcendent Reality? — MysticMonist
The perennial philosophy is not a school as such. There is an intellectual clique that are known variously as perennialists or traditionalists, with notable names being Frithjof Schuon, Rene Guenon, Ananda Coomaraswami and even Julius Evola. They’re generally reactionary - they think that modern culture is essentially degenerate and will soon destroy itself or collapse. Interestingly (or depressingly) Rene Guenon has come up in discussions about alt-right Uber troll Steven K Bannon, who apparently had some interest in such subjects; Evola also is associated with fascism and reactionary politics — Wayfarer
Of course having insight is different than following it and being virtous. The divine light shines on all of us, but we still need to turn towards it to appreciate its warmth. But there’s nothing we can do to stop it’s shining. — MysticMonist
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