Religious Experience Flashcards
William James’ Pragmatic approach (argument)
- religious experiences can lead to profound and transformative changes in individuals/ widespread phenomenom across cultures and histprical periods
- if so, then religious experiences are valid indicators of a divine or transcendant reality.
- so, (2)
Richard Swinburne’s Principle of Credulity
- people often report experiences of God or the divine.
- if so, then it is rational to believe that this experience corrosponds to reality unless there are reasons to doubt it.
- so, (2)
The Cumulative Argument (Swinburne)
- the combination of different arguments (including religious experience) strengthens the case for God’s existence.
- if so, religious experiences contribute significantly to the cumulative case for God.
- SO, (2)
Types of Religious Experience
Visions
Example: Julian of Norwich’s visions of Christ.
Types: Intellectual (understanding truth), Imaginary (visions in the mind), and Corporeal (external sensory experiences).
Mystical Experiences (William James)
Ineffability: Cannot be adequately described in words.
Noetic quality: Provide knowledge or insight beyond normal understanding.
Transience: Temporary but impactful.
Passivity: A sense of being acted upon by a higher power.
Numinous Experiences (Rudolf Otto)
Awareness of the “wholly other” (mysterium tremendum et fascinans).
Experience of awe and wonder in the presence of something divine or transcendent.
Corporate Religious Experiences
Example: The Toronto Blessing (1994) – a collective experience of divine presence marked by emotional and physical phenomena.
Conversion Experiences
Personal transformation and commitment to religious faith.
Example: St. Paul’s conversion on the road to Damascus.
the subjectivity critique
- subjective experiences lack objective verification.
- if so, religious experience cannot reliably point to the existence of God.
- So, (2)
Freud’s Psychological explanation
- illusions do not corrospond to external realities.
- if so, religious experiences are not evidence of God.
- SO, (2)
Marx sociological explanation
- Experiences shaped by external conditions do not reveal objective truth (Religious experiences are shaped by socio-economic conditions and serve as a form of escapism.)
- if so, then religious experiences fo not prove God’s existence.
- So, (2)
Neurological and Physiological Critique
- Religious experiences can be replicated through brain stimulation or the use of psychoactive substances.
- if so, they do not require a supernatural cause.
- if so, religious experiences are not evidence for God.
- So, (3)
replies to objections
Response to Subjectivity Critique
William James acknowledges subjectivity but argues that transformative effects and universality suggest validity.
Response to Freud and Marx
Swinburne: The possibility of psychological or sociological explanations does not necessarily negate the truth of religious experiences.
Response to Neurological Critique
Alister McGrath argues that natural processes may be the means through which God enables religious experiences, without diminishing their divine origin.