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W. James in Russian Academic Theology at the Beginning of the 20th century. Part II. From the Varieties of Religious Experience to the Mystical Mind

Pavel V. Khondzinskiy

Voprosy filosofii January 1, 2023 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.21146/0042-8744-2023-11-114-125 via Semantic Scholar

Summary

The publication of William James's 'The Varieties of Religious Experience' in Russian in 1910 sparked a discussion among academic theologians—M. Tareev, P. Minin, and A. Tuberovsky—who critically engaged James's pluralistic view of religious-mystical experience. They used James's scientific confirmation of such experience to address how to distinguish specifically Christian manifestations from the broader diversity.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding The works of P. Minin, M. Tareev, and A. Tuberovsky formed the concept of 'mystical theology,' integrating ideas of truly Christian experience of communion with God, knowledge of God, and activity in the world.

Abstract

As we know, the publication of the translation of W. James’ “The Varieties of Re­ligious Experience” in 1910 gave rise to a well-known discussion that took place in the pages of the journal “Questions of Philosophy and Psychology”. However, the fact that James’s concept has been critically comprehended in the works of some academic theologians, such as M. Tareev, P. Minin, A. Tuberovsky, still remains in the shade. Relying on James as the author who “scientifically” con­firmed the existence of a religious-mystical experience, they sought to respond to the challenge that James’s pluralism posed before them. This challenge boiled down to the question of principles for distinguishing from the general diversity of religious and mystical experience its specifically Christian manifestations, which would be linked both with the content of Christian teaching and with the Christian action in the world arising from it. Such a complex formulation of the issue was determined both by the need to substantiate the significance of Chris­tianity as the only divinely revealed religion in relation to other “external” reli­gions, and by the desire to solve the internal problem, which was reduced to the monastic – worldly, individual – social opposition in the life of the Church, which was very typical for that era. Having considered the works of P. Minin, M. Tareev, A. Tuberovsky, we come to the conclusion about the formation of the concept, which was later actualized in the Diaspora as the concept of “mystical theology”. This concept integrates the ideas of a truly Christian experi­ence of communion with God, knowledge of God and activity in the world.

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