From self-transcendent emotions to transcendent experiences: an exploratory study in the continuity between everyday and mystical experiences
Florián Cova, Angela Gaia F. Abatista
Philosophical Psychology November 6, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1080/09515089.2025.2583382 via OpenAlex
Summary
Everyday experiences of unity, particularly those felt in social groups, share key characteristics with mystical experiences, such as feelings of unity, insight, and meaning. This exploratory study found that both types of experiences are marked by social emotions. Investigating the connection between mystical and everyday experiences may help illuminate the psychological mechanisms and evolutionary origins of mystical experiences.
Study at a glance
| Design | qualitative study |
|---|---|
| Population | participants reporting past experiences of unity and self-loss |
| Key finding | Everyday experiences of unity share many features with mystical experiences, including feelings of unity and social emotions. |
Abstract
Mystical experiences are generally considered to be rare and special experiences, characterized by feelings of unity and self-loss. Still, certain researchers have recently proposed that mystical experiences could be placed on a continuum with more common and mundane experiences. In this paper, we present the results of an exploratory study, the goal of which was to identify ordinary experiences that might share (though to a lesser degree) the key characteristics of mystical experiences. To this end, we asked participants to report past experiences of unity and self-loss. Our results suggest that everyday experiences of unity, mainly elicited by the feeling of being part of a social group, share many (but not all) features of mystical experiences, such as feelings of unity, insight, and presence of meaning. Moreover, both mystical experiences and everyday unity experiences were characterized by the presence of social emotions. On the basis of these preliminary results, we argue that investigating the continuity between mystical and everyday experiences might contribute to shed light on the psychological mechanisms underlying mystical experiences and on their evolutionary origin.