Riding the Ox Back Home: The Nature of the Everyday Mystical

Journal of Consciousness Studies 21 (3-4):104-125 (2014)
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Abstract

Whereas much has been written about the aetiology of transient mystical experiences, there has been too little analysis of the nature of the longer term and permanent shifts known generally as enlightenment, moksha, nirvana, or sometimes Christ Consciousness. This paper identifies two major and relatively common phases of such shifts. The Dualistic Mystical State is a permanent interior stillness that is maintained while one is either at rest or engaged in thought or activity. Five reasons are offered for the hypothesis that the novel aspect of this state is not shaped, mediated, or formed by language, cultural beliefs, or expectations. In the second phase, the Unitive Mystical State , the felt boundaries between self and other have disappeared, and everything one encounters is experienced as connected with the stillness that previously was encountered as only interior. In addition to the five reasons offered previously, three additional factors militate for the hypothesis that language, expectations, or assumptions are unlikely to construct this unitive sense of non-differentness. Finally, the paper suggests that because of the change in social structure, in the future mystical teachers and leaders are likely to become more practical and connected with the everyday world and relationships than the traditional monkish and distant models

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