<p>"Questions of the larger significance of psychedelics are very apropos to the academic discourse and debate around these substances. One of the challenges for work in this area is that it needs to be conversant with an unusually large range of disciplines, including neuroscience, philosophy, and religious studies, among others. Jones weaves them all together well, and this will be a valuable resource. As someone who has been immersed in this literature, I learned a great deal from this fascinating book." — David J. Blacker, author of <i>Deeper Learning with Psychedelics</i></p><p>"This book offers a series of state-of-the-field assessments at the intersection of mysticism, philosophy of mind, cognitive science of religion, and psychedelic research. These are dynamic and technical literatures, and Jones has done us the service of reading them together without prioritizing one over the others. His facility with both the scientific and humanistic literature of the field is especially impressive and helpful." — Timothy R. Grieve-Carlson, Westminster College</p>

Examines how mystical practices and experiences are being applied in secular contexts today.Today is an exciting time for mysticism. Interest in mysticism today often involves what Aldous Huxley called "applied mysticism"-that is, taking mystical practices and experiences out of their traditional contexts, where the focus was on the total transformation of the individual, and applying them (often within a secular framework) to help other people with more limited this-worldly problems, such as a person's well-being in society or general social change. Neuroscientists are taking mystical experiences seriously, studying meditators and psychedelic subjects to gain knowledge of how the brain works. Cognitive scientists are exploring mystical altered states of consciousness to expand the spectrum of consciousness states-in particular, whether there is a state of "pure" consciousness. Buddhist meditation is being taken out of its religious contexts and adapted by psychotherapists to help with problems such as depression or addiction. The use of psychedelics in psychotherapy is also gaining traction while New Age thinkers are extolling the alleged merger of post-Newtonian science with mysticism. Mystical ideas are being adapted to problems on the social level-for example, in "socially-engaged" Buddhism. This is the first book to explore all these varieties of applied mysticism together and to examine the current state of the field (with a focus on philosophical issues) in a readily accessible manner.
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AcknowledgmentsPreface1. Mystical Experiences and the Neuroscientific Study of Meditators2. Limitations on the Neuroscientific Study of Drug-Enabled Mystical Experiences3. Pure Consciousness, Intentionality, Selflessness, and the Philosopher's Syndrome4 Triggers of Altered States of Consciousness Experiences5. Cognitive Bias in Mysticism and Its Study6. Mystical Experiences, Consciousness, and Inverse Multiple Realization7. The Role of Mystical Experiences in Psychedelic Therapy and Research8. Secular Mysticism9. Quantum Mysticism: Science Meets Mysticism in the New Age10. Applying Mysticism to Social Action TodayNotesReferencesIndex
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Examines how mystical practices and experiences are being applied in secular contexts today.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9798855801507
Publisert
2025-03-01
Utgiver
Vendor
State University of New York Press
Vekt
272 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
29 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
346

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Richard H. Jones is an independent scholar and researcher. His previous books include History of Mysticism and An Introduction to the Study of Mysticism, both published by SUNY Press.