Varieties of Religious Experience

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Varieties of Religious Experience William James On this work A classic on religious experience Recommended even by atheists like Dawkins/Dennett Some definitions: over-belief belief beyond available evidence survival theory religion a left over from primitive times, destined to disappear eventually The Topic: Religion Not institutional but personal experience Preliminary: feelings, acts, experiences of people in solitude in relation to whatever they consider the divine Does not require God (Buddhism, Emerson s transcendentalism atheistic) 1

The Divine: broad meaning, but not every total reaction to cosmos Middle p. 5 is view James rejects Voltaire s all is vanity not religious Nietzsche and Schopenhauer s grumbling not religious Must be: solemn, serious, and tender (bottom p. 6) The divine: only such a primal reality as the individual feels impelled to respond to solemnly and gravely, and neither by a curse nor a jest. (p. 7 top) James: focus on most intense forms rather than borderline Not just grudging submission to moral law (Kant) Not humble submission to decline and death (Lampson, p. 7) or Stoic Marcus Aurelius: comforted that nothing will happen to me which is not conformable to the nature of the universe (p. 8 bottom) Christian: joyful, peaceful acceptance; personal relation it adds to life an enchantment which is not rationally or logically deducible from anything else. This sort of happiness in the absolute and everlasting is what we find nowhere but in religion. A solemn joy Reality of the Unseen General character of religion: belief that there is an unseen order, and our supreme good lies in harmoniously adjusting to it Power of ideas with no sensory image For Kant, not properly knowledge Yet powerful; we act as if Absolute Beauty, Moral Law, Laws of Nature 2

Rationalism vs Mysticism Rationalism: vague impressions of something indefinable have no place Need facts of sensation and definite inferences from them James: the part of our mental life that rationalism accounts for is relatively superficial the unreasoned and immediate assurance is the deep thing in us, the reasoned argument but a surface exhibition. James describing human experiences; not endorsing this view Mystical Experience Ineffable: like rapture of music or love, cannot be conveyed to others in words Noetic: states of knowledge, insights into depths of truth unplumbed by the discursive intellect Transient (generally less than an hour) Passive: not felt to be under one s control; prophetic speech, speaking in tongues, trance, automatic writing From simple to more extreme Words take on new meaning: I ve heard that so many times but now it has more meaning Effect of light on sea, odors, music Dreamy states, enlargement of perception Everything has a meaning, if I could only understand it Obliteration of ordinary sensation, intensity of essential consciousness or pure, absolute Self Pathology? Often from intoxicants: The drunken consciousness is one bit of the mystic consciousness 3

Limits of rational consciousness James: (p. 25) our normal waking [rational] consciousness is but one special type of consciousness. No account of the universe in its totality can be final which [disregards] other forms of consciousness. James own experience: a reconciliation of opposites; melted into UNITY. Examples of mystical states From solitude of individual consciousness to unity with all that is : earth, heaven, and sea resounded as in one vast world-encircling harmony. (von Meysenbug, p. 28) Unlike dreams, still seem most real afterward: I was immersed in the infinite ocean of God. Cosmic consciousness: life and order of the universe combined with elation and joyousness Universe not composed of dead matter but a living Presence; consciousness that I possessed eternal life cosmic order is such that all things work together for the good of all Mystical Experience Characterized Mystical states have authority for those who have them No authority for those who don t have the experience The experiences are actually very diverse They point to no specific belief Forms not joyous but dreadful found in literature of delusional insanity (p. 32) Breakdown authority of rational consciousness as the only possible form 4

Conclusions: Characteristics of the Religious Life Visible world part of more spiritual world from which it gets its significance Union or harmony with spiritual world is our true end Communion (e.g., prayer) with that spiritual world (god, law, etc.) produces real effects within the phenomenal world Psychological effects A new zest to life, like a gift An assurance of safety and peace and, in relation to others, a preponderance of loving affections How far are these beliefs TRUE? Science is materialistic; goes against religion Survival theory : religion an atavisim, relic of past ages, a chapter in history of human egocentrism From scientific/darwinisn view: nature has no one ultimate tendency. Now-amusing selections from earlier writings (e.g., p. 46) 5

Is religion anachronistic? Easy to treat religion as a mere survival perpetuating primitive though P. 49: Pure anarchronism! Lewis rejects this criticism shallow to ignore subjective world(p. 49) Rejects survival theory: the impersonal view of science may someday be seen as a useful eccentricity (p. 50) Religion, dealing with personal destinies, must necessarily play an eternal part in human history. Two questions Is there a common nucleus among religions Is it true? Common to all religions There is something wrong about us in our natural, usual state We are saved from this wrongness by making proper connection with higher powers (p. 54) 6

Is this TRUE? Certainly true psychologically, but anything objective, true beyond value to us The more that religious experience connects us to is our subconscious self There is more to our soul than we are aware of The more of religion is the subconscious continuation of our conscious life The sense of union with a power beyond us is a sense of something literally true (p. 57) James own over-belief The divine presence is known through experience I will call this God (p. 60) An assurance of an ideal order that will be preserved Tragedy (e.g., scientific view of eventual destruction of solar system) only provisional and partial Postscript James sides with supernaturalism over naturalism Sides with crasser supernaturalism (not transcendental idealism): god s existence makes a difference to facts right now Prayerful communion which in one sense in part of ourselves and in another sense is not ourselves (p. 63) God produces immediate effects in the natural world Religious experience is union with something larger than ourselves in which we find greater peace 7