Religious Experience Flashcards

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1
Q

What did Wittegenstein develop in his ‘Philosophical Investigations’?

A
  • The concept of ‘seeing as’ where we interpret our experience in a certain way
  • E.g if we see someone we think we know, call out, and they turn out to be a stranger
  • He uses his famous rabbit duck illusion to show how the way we interpret something is pivotal to how we actually end up viewing it
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2
Q

Who is Wiliam James and what did he do?

A
  • American Philosopher and Psychologist
  • He gave the Gifford Lectures in Edinburgh
  • These were known as the ‘The Varieties of Religious Experience’ where he acknowledges the variety but tries to find some common ground
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3
Q

What are the first two common qualities of religious experience that William James identified?

A

Ineffability: These experiences are beyond the ability of our words to experience, the believer enters a mystical state of mind which is ‘negative’ as no words can describe the nature of what they are experiencing

Noetic Quality: Gives a kind of knowledge that is unlike the knowledge of any other human experience “all inarticulate”

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4
Q

What are the second two common qualities of religious experience that William James identified?

A

Transience: Meaning the experiencer has the experience for a very short time, rarely more than half an hour but the effects remain life changing

Passivity: Those in the grip of such an experience claim that they have no will of their own because they are under the influence of superior power

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5
Q

Does William James argue that religious experiences are ‘real’?

A
  • He does not argue that these experiences are real or divine he is merely saying that they are genuine
  • The one who experiences them is making a genuine claim
  • He argues their claims should be tested and not accepted, we must discount the possibility of delusion or mind altering substances
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6
Q

What are ‘over beliefs’ according to William James?

A
  • He argues that the experiences of the believer take place within a conceptual framework that already exists in the believers mind
  • What we see from the outside are the effects of what are described as ‘over-beliefs’
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7
Q

How does William James explain the counter-argument that religious experience cannot be genuine as people only experience that of their own religion, e.g a Christian would ONLY see Christ?

A
  • He argues there is a distinction between the experience in itself and the way in which it is experienced
  • We interpret experience in a way that fits with our own understanding of the world
  • The religion I have been taught will provide the framework with which I interpreted the experiences I have
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8
Q

What is Richard Swinburne’s ‘Principle of credulity’?

A
  • Argues that if someone believes they have experienced something we should believe them unless there is a good reason not to
  • E.g if someone sees a plane fly past a window there is a good chance they saw that and we ought to believe them
  • We do not usually question claims like this, unless we have a very good reason for doings so
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9
Q

What is Richard Swinburne’s ‘Principle of Testimony’?

A
  • In general people are truthful, unless they are a liar or disturbed we should believe them and their religious experience
  • We do not usually doubt everything a person says, this would make conversation impossible
  • He argues that if there are people who doubt someones religious experience they should be made to prove it false, if they cannot, then it should be believed
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10
Q

What is the issue with what Swinburne is claiming?

A
  • To compare a religious experience to any other sort of experience is inherently mistaken
  • The Testimony is rare and unusual, I know what everyday things like helicopters are, we cannot compare this to something as unique as a religious experience
  • It is far less likely that there will be observational errors in everyday experience compared to religious experience
  • I cannot describe God, there is a far greater likelihood of me making observational errors for something I have never encountered
  • They can claim to be truthful in what they experience, but not have correctly grasped the truth of their perception
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11
Q

What is the problem of other minds?

A
  • I cannot ever know what it is like to be in someone else’s mind, I explain everyones action through my own mind and what I believe they have experienced
  • I do not know what it is like to experience thing in their mind, e.g how they experience colours etc
  • As a result we can apply this to religious experience, despite them perhaps being sincere and honest I cannot accept their claim as I do not experience things from their mind
  • We cannot confuse the sincerity of a belief with the validity of a belief
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12
Q

What are Corporate Religious Experiences?

A
  • An experience, in this case religious, which is shared by a group of people
  • Important to note that every experience is still felt on an individual level, everyones experience still remains different
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13
Q

Where did the ‘Toronto Blessing’ take place?

A
  • Events that took place and still taking place at the the Toronto Vineyard Airport Church
  • It is evangelical and emphasises personal testimony and the direct intervention of the Holy Spirit
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14
Q

What happened at the ‘Toronto Blessing’?

A
  • A phenomenon called ‘Holy Laughter’ whereby people in the congregation burst out into spontaneous laughter during solemn worship
  • People weep, fall to the floor in ecstatic trances and make animal noises, roaring like lions or barking like animals
  • All these are called ‘holy laughter’
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15
Q

What is the nature of Corporate Religious Experiences?

A

It is usually the experience of a group we are closely associated with, e.g the Church we attend, the faith within our family or school

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16
Q

How can group behaviour be used to criticise Corporate Religious experience?

A
  • It is argued that we as humans often behave much differently in a group compared to us as individuals
  • Teenagers and adults in a group can experience things such as laughter that becomes infectious
  • Those attracted to evangelical worship were already pre-disposed to this behaviour and effects of the group acting in this way
  • A group atmosphere of those who believe in the Holy Spirit in the very sense that they did at the Toronto Church could lead to a sort of group hallucination
17
Q

How can the Toronto Blessing allow us to question the work of God?

A
  • Allows us to ask the question of why would God make people behave in laughable ways?
  • This has no logic, why would God provide the Holy Spirit directly to a small group in an obscure Church who are seemingly making fool of themselves and claim God is the cause
  • Is the Holy Spirit really interested in a small group of people rather than working on the atrocities that are currently happening in our world?
  • If this is an act of God it could be argued it is one that should not be worshipped
18
Q

What is a Conversion Experience?

A
  • An experience which alters her way of life from one set of convictions to another
  • A non-believer could become a believer and one may switch the religion in which they are committed to
19
Q

Quote William James on conversion experience?

A

“becomes unified… and happy”

20
Q

What is the famous example of St Pauls conversion experience?

A
  • in the Acts of the Apostles he was leading a group to Damascus to persecute the embryonic Christian community
  • He was thrown from his horse and heard a voice ‘Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?’
  • He was blinded and taken to Demascus where he was tended to by Christians until he came to the truth of the Christian faith
  • Once he could see again he became Paul and ceased persecution of Christians
21
Q

What is the famous example of St Pauls conversion experience?

A
  • in the Acts of the Apostles he was leading a group to Damascus to persecute the embryonic Christian community
  • He was thrown from his horse and heard a voice ‘Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?’
  • He was blinded and taken to Demascus where he was tended to by Christians until he came to the truth of the Christian faith
  • Once he could see again he became Paul and ceased persecution of Christians and became one of their greatest missionary and was martyred for his beliefs
  • His experience had made him believe that his previous beliefs were mistaken and h moved in new circles, believing new things
22
Q

What is the conversion experience of young British soldier William Vecera who served in Afghanistan? (Quote)

A

“problem was I wasn’t living for God”
- His conversion experience is gradual, there is no sudden single experience
- He made the effort to go to Mass, to confession and read scripture
- His conversion experience was desired and he calls on God not to desert him

23
Q

How does mystical experience link to a Union with a greater power?

A
  • A common part of any mystical experience seems to be a union with some being or power infinitely greater than ourselves
  • We can question to what extent this link is really genuine, we do not sit in the presence of God nor ‘see’ God the same way we sit in the presence of a friend and see them
  • Regardless people argue for having experienced something overwhelming of being in the presence of something infinitely greater than themselves
24
Q

Can religious experiences be interpreted as a mere illusion?

A
  • As humans our minds play tricks, children have imaginations that form part of their lives
  • Adults who are psychologically disturbed hear voices, we are prone to many perceptual errors
  • Even psychologically stable adults experience things such as a feeling that something terrible will happen etc
  • All these point to the idea that psychologically it is plausible that our religious experiences are perceptual errors and psychological illusions of our mind
25
Q

What point does Bertrand Russel make in his autobiography about physiological factors affecting religious experience?

A
  • He remarked to Beatrice Webb (keen on fasting) ‘if you eat too little, you see visions; and if you drink too much, you see snakes’
  • His point here is that as humans we are greatly affected by our physical state, drink, drugs, illness and tiredness can change our thought process
  • If we were to deprive someone of sleep they will begin to hallucinate, can this be the real reason for us thinking we are in the presence of God?
26
Q

How does John Cottingham argue that all people, even non-religious, can have a ‘numinous’ experience? (Quote)

A

“experiences are available to the non-believer as well as the believer”
- People have experiences of art and nature that go beyond the everyday and which may properly be called spiritual
- They are, however, not considered as coming from God

27
Q

What does Jean Paul Sartre suggest in his lecture ‘Existentialism and Humanism’?

A

“had been made to feel continually that he was accepted for charity’s sake”
- After failing his military exam, he took it as a sign that he was meant to be a part of the religious and became a part of the Order
- Shows that the event of experience and its interpretation are two very different things
- He interpreted it as a record from God to become a part of his institutions

28
Q

What did Rudolf Otto argue?

A
  • Argued for ‘numinous experiences’ in saying that God is transcendent
  • God can only affect us by filling us with a sense of awe (mysterium tremendum et fascinans)
29
Q

What is Otto’s mysterium tremendum et fascinans?

A
  • Mysterium means the mystery of the experience because it is indescribable but leaves the person feeling a sense of awe
  • Fascinans means the experience draws you in with a strange fascination
  • Numinosity is ea sense of being in the presence of an awesome power yet feeling separate from it
  • Ultimately the encounter with God is inexpressible
30
Q

Teresa of Avila in Support of Otto’s mystical experience?

A
  • Had a mystical experience where she was told it was sexual frustration
  • She claimed she would have felt disgust if this were true but she was not
  • “I was conscious of him”