Explain the major features of a mystical experience, using examples

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Explain the major features of a mystical experience, using examples

A religious experience can be defined in a number of ways. Approximately it is considered an almost supernatural occurrence, or as a ‘mental event’ of which a person is aware that they have undergone the experience. These experiences can be spontaneous or can be brought about through training.

The term ‘mystical’ is used to classify many religious experiences, and involves the ‘spiritual recognition of truths beyond normal understanding.’ Mystical experiences have a number of experiences attached to them, that shall be addressed further later in my essay. It is thought that mysticism is the closest a person can come to meeting the Divine. Some people say that it is possible to be ‘one’ with God in a mystical experience, (see Passivity), but this idea is rejected by Muslims whom see this as the sin of shirk – comparing anything to the greatness of God.

William James belief the categorizing of a religious experience was too ambiguous and so he set down a number of characteristics a true religious experience should have. The first of these was a sense of ineffability. Ineffability relates to the idea that all religious experiences are personal. Each and every one is unique to the person whom is having the experience and it is difficult to display this to someone else. The person feels there is a great event to be described but cannot find the words to portray it to an audience. The descriptions offered are of little help to people as these are usually unique descriptions. It is, for example, like trying to explain what salt and vinegar crisps taste like to someone whom has never tasted anything.

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The next characteristic James thought that all mystical experiences should show is a noetic quality. This is the gaining of some extra Divine knowledge. It seems knowledge is not learned as such, but is absorbed by perception and intuition. In this form it may be considered a revelation, but often people feel the knowledge enter them, and, upon the ending of the experience, lose the grasp of the knowledge they had learnt and were simply left with a feeling of great awe and a memory that they had held a great knowledge. An experience with a noetic quality to it ...

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