Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Religious
Experiences
- An encounter with the divine a non empirical occurrence
that brings awareness
- they are difficult to define into one common theme but can be separated into
two different groups
- A direct experience - the person having the
experience feels they are in contact with
God
- An indirect experience - there is
an inner experience of Gods
action in creation
- Caroline franks davis suggests 7 types
- seeing the work of God when looking at the world AWARENESS EXPERIENCE
- having a vision or inner experience QUASI_SENSORY EXPERIENCE
- encountering the holiness of God NUMINOUS EXPERIENCE
- a conversion experience REGENERATIVE EXPERIENCE
- having prayers answered INTERPRETIVE EXPERIENCE
- a sense of the ultimate reality MYSTICAL EXPERIENCE
- receiving enlightenment and knowledge through revelation REVELATORY EXPERIENCE
- common themes
- feeling of deep inner peace
- a certainty that everything will turn out well
- sense of the need to help others
- a belief that love is at the center of everything
- a sense of joy
- great emotional intensity
- scholars try to define religious experiences
- Martin Buber "i and thou"
God reveals himself to
people on a personal level
as they experience him in
life and in the world
- human relationships
everyday are on a simple
level "i-it relationship"
serious and more
meaningful relationships go
deeper an "i-thou
relationship"
- in relationships we experience God
he is the "eternal thou"
- Paul Tillich systematic
theology states that a religious
experience is feeling of
"ultimate concern" a feeling
that demands a decisive
decision
- an encounter followed by a special
understanding of its religious
significance
- "religious experience without
religious reflection is blind,
every claim to an experience
of God requires examination"
- William James "varieties of religious experiences" they
draw on the common range of emotions (happiness,
fear, wonder) but they are directed at the
- divine
- this gives the person an overwhelming
feeling of reverence a joyful desire to
belong to God a renewed approach to life
- Schleiermacher argues that the
most significant factor in a religious
experience is that it is based not on
religious doctrine but on faith
- Richard Dawkins "The God Delusion" claims there is not such thing
as religious language. they are merely expressions of a persons
psychological needs.
- Types of religious Experience
- 1. THE DRAMATIC OR CONVERSION EVENT a direct
experience and the numinous. often a vision
is seen accompanied by feeling of awe but also humility
- 2. RESPONSES TO LIFE AND THE WORLD
gentler indirect experiences which
enhance a persons understanding of
their life and the world around them
- they often come a result of prayer
God guides them and helps them
make sense of the world
- 3. REVELATORY EXPERIENCES divine
self-disclosure God makes himself directly
known by a vision or dream.
- one crucial part for this type of experience is that the
experient acquires new knowledge (universal truths about
God, the future) two types:
- PROPOSITIONAL
REVELATION God
communicates his
divine message to a
human being (moses
receiving the ten
commandments)
- NON-PROPOSITONAL
REVELATION through
religious experience a person
comes to a moment of
"realisation" of divine truth
(buddha gained
enlightenment)
- 4. NEAR DEATH EXPERIENCES said to
occur when a person dies usually in a medical
operation and is later resuscitated. number of
core experiences found
- a feeling of peace and ineffability,
going through a dark tunnel, meeting a
being of light, making a decision to
cross a barrier or not
- 5. MYSTICAL EXPERIENCES
a person experiences the
ultimate reality which brings
with it a sense of unity,
separateness, dependence with
the divine
- difficult to describe in ordinary
language They in some way touches
and communicates with the divine
and with levels of reality beyond
spatio-temporal
- THEISTIC MYSTICISM involves awareness if God and MONISTIC MYSTICISM
offers awareness of the soul self and conscience
- William James listed four charateristics of mystic experiences
- INEFFABILITY a state of feeling that defies description
- NOETIC QUALITY revelations of universal and eternal truth
- TRANSIENCY a brief but profoundly important experience
- PASSIVITY a feeling of being taken over by a superior authority
- EXTROVERTIVE looking outwardsto see God in world INTROVERTIVE
looks within themselves and sees their personal identity being merged into
divine unity
- 6. CORPORATE EXPERIENCE large number of people seemingly experience God at the same time
- THE TORONTO BLESSING peopel shook uncontrollably, wept, laughed and made unusual
sounds. was spread all over the usa and candada and to the uk.
- some see it as a blessing others see it as an experience engineered through mass
hysteria and technology
- FACTORS THAT LEAD TO RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCES scholars have accepted that certain conditions can trigger religious experiences.
- MUSIC AND ATMOSPHERE most religions use
music in worship offers a shared social experience
Dance can also be used
- PRAYER is a communion with God. comes in many forms
(thanks,help guidance, forgiveness,praise) Gods answered
prayers is a sure sign of existence.
- Speaking in tongue can be seen as a sign of God within the
individual often found in the charismatic movement and pentecostal
church
- MEDITATION theistic tradition is a prayerful state where a person seeks the
understanding of and union with God.
- Non theistic traditions such as Buddhism the aim is to seek the loss of self
- ARGUMENTS IN FAVOR OF RELIGIOUS
EXPERIENCES AS PROOF FOR THE EXISTENCE
OF GOD
- the argument using religious experience as proof is an posteriori (derived from factual
evidence) there have been thousand of testimonies
- Are some problems: it is clear that experience of X does not indicate the reality of X are
experience can always be mistaken.
- P1 would therefore be better seen as P1: experience of X indicates the probable
reality of X
- Premise 2 creates further problems if regular experiences is open to
misapprehension then experiences of the divine must be even more ambiguous
- it depends on appealing to non empirical and empirical evidence. if we allow that regular experience indicates
the probable reality of X
- then experience of God must also indicate the probable reality of God but it would be reasonable
that it is at the lower level of probability
- Premise 3 takes the implication of premise 2 a step further It is ambiguous someone may claim to
experience God or is it that God can be experienced
- is it possible we experience God in the same way we experience others or the same way we experience
unicorns.
- Premise 3 does not tell us that experience of God has actually taken place but that under certain
circumstances it is possible God may be experienced
- The conclusion therefore cannot be sustained simply on the basis of the claims made in the premises.
- The most that can be claimed is that if experience is reliable it can indicate the reality of
that which is experienced but this cannot be guarenteed
- the argument is based on the premise that experience is in some way the product of facts
about the real world
- P1: Experience of X indicates the reality of X
P2: Experience of God indicates the reality of
God P3: It is possible to experience God C:
God exists
- THE INDUCTIVE ARGUMENT they
look at the subjective testimony of
individuals who claim to have
religious experiences to find similar
characteristics
- and draw a conclusion
RICHARD SWINEBURN argues
inductively that it is reasonable
to believe that God is loving
and personal and would seek
to reveal
- Swineburn suggested
that religious
experience can be felt
empirically through our
senses and interpreted
non empirically through
our religious sense.
- If we are told someone has had a religious experience
then we should believe that experience at all
- THE CUMULATIVE ARGUMENT is based on the view that if we take all of the arguments about
religious experience together then they are more convincing
- if this was true the amount of religious experiences would result in religious experience
most definitely being proof for the existence of God
- DAVID HUME responded to testimony "there is not to be found in all history any miracle attested by sufficient number of
men of such unquestioned good
- sense, education and learning as to secure us against all delusions
- several weak arguments put together does not form a
strong one rather one large weak one
- THE PRINCIPLE OF TESTIMONY AND CREDULITY Richard Swineburn
- People normally tell the truth and we cannot always doubt accounts We dont
doubt basic facts about the world that we have not directly experienced
- PRINCIPLE OF TESTIMONY "in the absence of special consideration,
the experience of others are (probably) as they report them"
- As people usually tell the truth there are only 3 types of
evidence that should render their testimony
- 1. if the circumstances surrounding the experience are unreliable, for example through hallucinatory drugs
- 2. If there is particular evidence to suggest that the person is lying
- 3. If the experience can be explained in terms other than God for example if the person is
suffering from a mental illness
- since so many people have experiences of what seems to them to be
God then a basic principle of rationality suggests we should believe them
- PRINCIPLE OF CREDULITY unless we have overwhelming evidence to the
contrary we should believe that things are as they seem to be
- "how things seem to be is a good guide to how they are" religious experiences
provided convincing proof for the existence of God
- "I suggest that the
overwhelming testimony of so
many millions of people to
occasionally experience God
must in the absence of
counter-evidence be
- taken as tipping the balance of
evidence decisively in favour of the
existence of God
- in support of swineburns position empirical research undertaken
indicates that 40% of people have at some point had a religious
experience
- PETER VARDY and THE PUZZLE OF GOD uses the
example of someone supposedly seeing a UFO or the
loch ness monster they may be mistaken
- therefore we should remain skeptical unless there was a
great deal of evidence to support them
- "the probability of all such experiences must be low and
therefore quality of the claimed experiences must be
proportionately high"
- ARGUMENTS AGAINST RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCES
AS PROOF FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
- Main difficulty with religious experiences is that they cannot be
verified by objective, empirical testing we cannot carry out a scientific
experiment
- LUDWIG WITTGENSTEIN used the notion of
SEEING-AS suggesting that in fact each person sees
their experiences differently some may think they
- have experienced God others may think they have
experienced something else. So all testimonies
concerning religious experiences are unreliable
- R.M HARE talks of religious experiences as a blik this is an
unverifiable and unfalsifiable way of looking at the world.
- The believer sees or feels something and claims it comes from
God It is their personal interpretation and they believe it to be true.
- it cannot be proved true for everyone else and therefore the
testimony is unreliable
- JOHN HICK observed that testimonies of religious experience might also be equally
well interpreted in non-religious ways
- "any special event or experience which can be constituted as manifesting the divine
can also be constituted in other ways and accordingly cannot carry
- the weight of proof of Gods existence" people cannot experience God in the way they
experience either the world or other people
- NATURAL EXPLANATIONS
experiences could be brought on
by drugs or alcohol
- research suggests that
stimulation of the temporal
lobes of the brain with
electric shocks produces
experiences similar to near
death experiences
- PERSINGER claims that 80% of
his research subjects They are
more prevalent prior to earth
quakes and this is likely to be a
result of changed
- electro-magnetivity changing
the mind state
- SENSORY DEPRIVATION HOOD
AND MORRIS have suggested
deprivation produce religiousiity by
reduced activity in the left hemisphere
of the brain
- SIGMUND FREUD gives a psychological explanation suggesting it
is a psychological reaction to a hostile world. we feel helpless
- and so create God in our minds as a great father and protector
- Revelatory experiences are regarded as
particular untrustworthy In Buddhism a
revelatory experience is not accepted unless
the experient is already
- at a very advanced stage
of meditation and others
have shared their insight
- Catholic Church alleged revelations are strictly
tested to ensure they are in line with teachings of
the church
- near-death experiences can be seen by
critics as far from religious experiences
they are in fact some kind of mental
phenomenon possibly caused
- by a lack of oxygen to the brain
particularly temporal lobes which is the
center of emotion
- SUMMARY OF MAIN ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE VALIDITY OF RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCES
- 1. If God does not exist there can be no experience of him
2.Any religious experience may be open to a non-religious
interpretation
- 3.Experience can be deceptive and there are no agreed tests for
verifying that an experience comes from God
- 4. The testimony of religious believers is unrealiable as their
views may be affected by their pre-existing religious belief
- 5.Religious experiences may be the manifestation of
psychological needs for instance to help us cope with fear of
death
- 6. The emotions and sensations that come with a religious
experience can be explained by biological or neurological
imbalances in the body
- RICHARD
DAWKINS THE
GOD DELUSION
"if we are gullible
we dont recognize
hallucinations or
lucid dreaming for
what it is and
claim it to be God
- JEAN PAUL SATRE suggests
that convertion experiences
happen in time of personal crisis
to help individuals cope
- JUNG we have a God archetype that is imprinted in our psyche
- IS IT MEANINGFUL TO TALK ABOUT RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCES
- does the language of religious
experiences serve to convey
anything significant. LOGICAL
POSITIVISTS all religious
language is meaningless
- they cannot be analytic
or synthetic and therefor
eunverifiable
- A J AYER dismissed religious
experiences on the ground that
"people having religious experiences
is interesting from the psychological
point of
- view it does not in any way imply
that there is such a thing as
religious knowledge
- if someone claims to have seen God
they make the claim along the same
ways as they would claimed to have
seen a yellow patch
- the statement "there exists here a
yellow-coloured material thing" expresses
a genuine synthetic proposition which can
be empirically verified
- "there exists a transcendent God" has no literal
significance Ayer was criticising the religious experient who
moves from asserting that they were
- experiencing a particular religious emotion to asserting
that there exists a transcendent being who is the object of
that emotion
- whilst it is true that if there was
no God we could not experience
God there still needs to be proof
that there is no God
- Theists would argue that the
existence of God is a better
explanation than science can offer
- although it is possible foe experiences to be open to both
religious and non religious interpretations it is illogical to
assume that all religious
- interpretation are all incorrect. if it is possible to experience
God then some of the accounts must be true.
- one key empirical test for validity is to
examine the effect it has on the
person if compatible with what we feel
should be expected as a result
- of experiencing a benevolent divine
being, then we may have stronger
grounds on which to believe the
claim
- ANTHONY FLEW argues
that the testimony of
religious believers is
biased irrational and questionable
- it cannot be regarded as meaningful because there
is nothing to count against it. religious believers are
so convinced of the truth of their religious
- EG people continue to believe in an omnibenevolent and
omniscient God even though there is evil and suffering so
what would change their view?
- uses the parable of the
gardener to highlight how
people will change certain
things to stick by and verify
their beliefs
- statements that they often refuse to consider
evidence to the contrary
- JOHN HICK
ESCHATOLOGICAL
VERIFICATION God may one
day verify the religious
experiences himself
verification may be realised
at the end of time.
- Swineburn argues that it is
perfectly meaningful for a
personal loving God to make
himself know to humanity