Mystical Experience and Metaphysics
Paul Marshall
The essay itself is a supplement for Marshall's essay in Beyond Physicalism entitled, "Mystical experiences as windows on reality" - posted excerpts from the essay a few times in this thread.
Paul Marshall
Quote:When significant parallels are observed between the metaphysical teachings of mystical traditions, there can be a temptation to attribute them to common experiential insights, as mystical perenni-alists do, and it is indeed possible that some shared features of metaphysical systems do have a basis in common experience. For example, the language of light that is a common feature of emanative metaphysics, expressive of the outflow of creation from its source and of mystical return to that source, is probably more than symbol-ism based on universal familiarity with the life-giving sun, for special experiences of luminosity are a very common, cross-cultural feature of mystical experience. Nevertheless, it would be a mistake to overlook other possibilities, such as the emer-gence of comparable ideas in different cultures through discursive reflection alone or through the diffusion of ideas by missionary activity, trade, military expeditions, and migration. Significant transmission of mystical ideas has certainly taken place on occasions, as for instance in the well-recognized influence of Neoplatonism on forms of Jewish, Christian, and Islamic mysticism.
Quote:Reality has distinguishable “aspects” – facets, subdomains, dimensions, gradations, levels – with which mystics come into contact. William James (1902) adopted an aspectist position when, in the face of the metaphysical diversity of mystical teach-ings, he raised the possibility that mystical states are “windows” on “a more extensive and inclusive world,” and pointed out that this world may have a “mixed constitu-tion,” with heights and depths (p. 428). The classic Indian parable of the elephant and the blind men, told in Jaina, Buddhist, and Hindu traditions, can be used to bring across the approach. The blind men, unable to see the elephant and therefore its varied totality, touch different parts of the animal, such as the tail, trunk, leg, and ear, and so have different experiences and give different accounts of the elephant, likening it to a rope, snake, pillar, and rug respectively. The aspectist supposes that mystics of all traditions “touch” reality, make contact with it, but may have different experiences of it, depending on which facets of reality they discover. Some mystics will make contact with a personal creative aspect, some with an impersonal aspect, some with cosmic reality, some with an archetypal realm, and so forth. Mystical traditions with complex ontologies have room for understanding a variety of expe-riences, and if the ontologies are constructed hierarchically, as they often have been, then the corresponding types of mystical experiences will be ordered hierarchically too, and taken to reflect stages of mystical development. Although the deepest level of reality may be simple, reality as a whole is stratified and complex.
The essay itself is a supplement for Marshall's essay in Beyond Physicalism entitled, "Mystical experiences as windows on reality" - posted excerpts from the essay a few times in this thread.
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
(This post was last modified: 2019-03-22, 11:50 PM by Sciborg_S_Patel.)
- Bertrand Russell