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Conceptualizing Psychedelic Pure Consciousness

Márk Losoncz

Religions August 20, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.3390/rel16081079 via OpenAlex

Summary

A full experience of pure consciousness is achievable in a psychedelic state, which shares core properties with pure consciousness attained through meditation. This challenges Metzinger's view that meditation is the best method for reaching pure consciousness. The article suggests that both experiences reveal similar insights into consciousness, self, and reality, and emphasizes the need for caution in interpreting these experiences in religious or spiritual contexts.

Study at a glance

Key finding Psychedelic experiences of pure consciousness are phenomenologically indistinguishable from those achieved through meditation.

Abstract

Drawing upon a meticulous delineation of pure consciousness’s fundamental and necessary features—including unstructuredness, maximal simplicity, selflessness, awareness as such, zero-perspective, and the absence of specific phenomenal qualities—this article asserts that a full-fledged experience of pure consciousness is attainable within the psychedelic state. Critically, this psychedelic manifestation is argued to be phenomenologically indistinguishable in its core properties from pure consciousness accessed via meditative practices. Consequently, this finding not only problematizes, but actually directly refutes Metzinger’s thesis, which posits meditation as the sole “best and most natural candidate” for achieving pure consciousness. Moreover, this work champions a soft phenomenological perennialism. This perspective navigates a middle ground between rigid perennialism and radical constructivism, underscoring the identical phenomenological core shared by all pure consciousness experiences, including those induced by psychedelics. This exploration further posits that psychedelic pure consciousness experiences can yield significant epistemic insights into the fundamental nature of consciousness, the self, and reality. Beyond this, a systematic phenomenology of pure consciousness is demonstrated to offer profound contributions to our understanding of certain religious–spiritual concepts such as God. Nonetheless, while acknowledging naturalistic critiques, a significant caveat is issued: extreme caution is warranted regarding religious–spiritual interpretations gleaned from such phenomenologies. Ultimately, the paper underscores the burgeoning importance of a spiritual naturalistic interpretation of pure consciousness.

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