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The role of self-transcendent emotions in psychedelic experiences: a two-process proposal

Florián Cova, Federico Seragnoli

Philosophical Psychology July 7, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1080/09515089.2025.2526652 via OpenAlex

Summary

Psychedelics can lead to profound subjective experiences that may be crucial in psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy. This paper highlights the similarities between these experiences and two emotions: awe, which alters self-perception and time perception, and being moved, which evokes feelings of insight and connectedness. The authors suggest that these emotions could significantly influence the therapeutic process and present a model outlining their roles, along with several hypotheses for future testing.

Study at a glance

Key finding The paper proposes that emotions like awe and being moved might play important roles in psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy.

Abstract

Psychedelics are known to elicit intense and meaningful subjective experiences. These subjective experiences are supposed to play a major role in psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy. However, not much attention has been paid to the role played by emotions in these experiences. In this paper, we argue that typical psychedelic-induced experiences share many phenomenological features with two emotions: awe (which involves a reduced sense of the self, need for cognitive accommodation, and alterations of temporal perception) and being moved (which involve feelings of insight, meaningfulness, and connectedness). On the basis of this comparison, we argue that these two emotions might play an important role in psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy and put forward a two-process model of the role of emotions in psychedelic-assisted therapy. Based on this model, we propose several testable hypotheses that can be derived from this model.

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