Abstract
Applying Michel Henry’s philosophical framework to the phenomenological analysis of
religious experience, the author introduces a concept of material introspection and a new theory of the
constitution of religious experience in phenomenologically material interiority. As opposed to ordinary
mental self-scrutiny, material introspection happens when the usual outgoing attention is reverted onto
embodied self-awareness in search of mystical self-knowledge or union with God. Such reversal posits
the internal field of consciousness with the self-disclosure of phenomenological materiality. As shown by
the example of Vedantic self-inquiry, material introspection is conditioned on the attitude ‘I “see” myself’
and employs reductions which relieve phenomenological materiality from the structuring influence
of intentionality; the telos of material introspection is expressed by the inward self-transcendence
of intentional consciousness into purified phenomenological materiality. Experience in material
introspection is constituted by the self-affection and self-luminosity of phenomenological materiality;
experience is recognized as religious due to such essential properties as the capacity of being selffulfilled, and specific qualitative “what it’s like”(s). Drawing on more than 5000 live accounts of internal
religious experience, it is shown that introspective attention can have different trajectories, producing,
within a temporal extension of material introspection, different spatial modifications of embodied selfawareness and a variety of corresponding religious experiences.