Spirituality
Philosophy of Psychedelics August 1, 2021 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1093/med/9780198843122.003.0009
Summary
Psychedelic research supports the idea that transformative experiences can be considered spiritual while aligning with a naturalistic worldview. These experiences temporarily alter self-referential thinking, allowing feelings of connection and awe. The findings align with concepts of spirituality focused on connection, aspiration, and exploration of profound questions, suggesting that such practices do not rely on non-naturalistic beliefs.
Study at a glance
| Key finding | Psychedelic evidence supports the notion that transformative experiences can be spiritual and compatible with a naturalistic worldview. |
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Abstract
‘Spirituality’ examines the import of psychedelic evidence for the philosophical project of naturalising spirituality. This chapter argues that psychedelic research vindicates the claim that there are transformative experiences and practices that can legitimately be called ‘spiritual’ and are compatible with adherence to a naturalistic worldview. The existential transformation afforded by some psychedelic experiences provides a paradigm for naturalistic spirituality: the temporary suspension of our default, self-referential mode of cognition, making available experiences of connectedness and feelings of wonder and awe. Jerome Stone (2012) has reviewed recent philosophical work on naturalistic spirituality and extracted some core ideas: notably (i) that spirituality is about connection, aspiration, and asking the Big Questions, and (ii) that these are all ways of overcoming the limitations of the ordinary sense of self. This chapter argues that psychedelic evidence supports these claims, as well as the further claim that such experiences and practices are independent of non-naturalistic metaphysical ideations.