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Religions

152 papers in the library · 492 citations · publishing 2014-2026

Papers

The Brain in Indian Medical and Religious Traditions: A Relational Organ Model of Mastiṣka, Hṛdaya, and Nāḍī

Religions April 24, 2026 Youngsun Yang, Eunyoung Lee

Indian intellectual traditions developed a distinctive 'relational organ model' in which brain and heart function as complementary poles of a single vital-cognitive network connected by the nāḍī (neural-energetic channel) system, neither purely cardiocentric nor encephalocentrist but integrated within a hierarchical framework. This model evolved from the Atharvaveda through classical Āyurvedic texts to Haṭha Yoga literature, which located ultimate consciousness in the cranial Sahasrāra while preserving the heart as the integrative hub. The Sāṃkhya philosophical framework provided the metaphysical key by distinguishing non-material consciousness (puruṣa) from the material cognitive apparatus (antaḥkaraṇa). The article brings these historical findings into dialogue with modern neurocardiology and prāṇāyāma science.

Psychoactive Substances in Daoist Practice: A Cultural and Historical Perspective

Religions April 2, 2026 Qiongke Geng

Daoist cultivation traditions incorporate psychoactive substances, derived from botanicals or artificial synthesis, within ritual consumption practices to induce mystical experiences and facilitate union with the Dao. These substances are part of the broader category of Daoist ingestive culture (fushi). Analysis of Daoist scriptures shows that the use of psychoactive substances goes beyond physiological stimulation, representing a distinctive integration of material practices with transcendental pursuits aimed at achieving perfection in both body and spirit.

Seeing and Hearing God: Sensory Experience in Angela of Foligno’s Memoriale

Religions April 2, 2026 Eduard López Hortelano

Angela of Foligno's Memoriale presents seeing and hearing not merely as devotional motifs but as epistemic operations that transform affect into theological cognition. Sensory language in the text mediates authority, discernment, and transformation. The article argues that Angela's itinerary progresses from imitating Christ to participating in the Trinity, culminating in a state described as being in medio Trinitatis. The Memoriale is thus a theology of perception where embodiment, affect, and cognition are inseparable, with suffering and compassion functioning as forms of knowledge.

A Cultural Pathway to Addressing Contemporary Mental Illness: Construction and Healing Logic of the “Virtual Illness” Concept in Shamanism in the North of China

Religions April 1, 2026 Xiaoshuang Liu

In northern China, shamanic practices have developed an indigenous concept called 'virtual illness' to address mental distress arising from modern individuation. Prolonged mental distress is understood as leading to possession by external malevolent spirits, constituting a form of virtual illness. Healing involves attributing misfortune—including failure and mental illness—to the possessed spiritual identity, conducting spiritual healing on that identity, and encouraging individuals to maintain a positive, forward-looking state. This approach builds a psychological foundation for coping with mental illness and offers a unique response to the individualized self. These cultural healing practices adapt to the modern Chinese medical system and provide a targeted perspective for understanding mental illness in China's individuation process, prompting philosophical reflection on the concept of the self.

The Paradox of Omniscience (Sarvajñāna): From Divine Omniscience to the Mystical Self-Awareness in Indian Philosophy

Religions March 20, 2026 Youngsun Yang

Indian philosophy offers a distinctive spectrum of views on omniscience (sarvajñāna), ranging from a personal Creator-God to impersonal textual authority and perfected human achievement. The article argues that the question of who knows everything is ultimately not epistemological but ontological—it concerns the nature of consciousness itself. Across Vedic, Upaniṣadic, Nyāya-Yoga, Mīmāṃsā, Jain, Buddhist, Sāṃkhya, and Advaita traditions, omniscience shifts from cosmic personhood to Self-knowledge, logical necessity, authorless text, or human attainment. The final analysis shows that authentic liberation transcends encyclopedic omniscience, requiring a transformation from object-knowledge to non-objectifying awareness. The "All" cannot be an object of knowledge because it is the condition for any knowledge whatsoever.

God and Humanity in an Evolving Universe: Rudolf Steiner’s Christology and the Knowledge Drama of the Second Coming in the Work of Yeshayahu Ben-Aharon

Religions March 20, 2026 Torbjørn Eftestøl, Jeremy Qvick

This article examines Rudolf Steiner's Christology within cosmic evolution, focusing on the Second Coming as a metaphysical event. It uses an immanent-synthetic methodology to present a sacramental, participatory epistemology. The first part describes Steiner's 'Mystery of Golgotha' as a cosmic turning point where macrocosmic death is reversed into a resurrection life stream. The second part explores Yeshayahu Ben-Aharon's development of these ideas into a 'knowledge drama of the Second Coming,' involving an individual 'essence-exchange' with the Christ impulse. The article discusses social-metaphysical implications through the 'Reversed Cultus,' where the indwelling Christ becomes humanity's 'Higher Self,' grounding a new community and 'school of love' to address technoscientific challenges. It argues for a renewed understanding of the Second Coming as a step in humanity's spiritual evolution.

Introduction to the Special Issue “Imagining Ultimacy: Religious and Spiritual Experience in Literature”

Religions March 5, 2026 Matthew Wickman

Scholars characterize religious and spiritual experiences as profound, meaningful, and enlightening, with Ann Taves labeling them "special" experiences and Paul Tillich describing them as matters of "ultimate concern." The text presents these perspectives from scholars who study such experiences, emphasizing their perceived depth and significance.

Śrīmad Rājcandra’s Spiritual Biophilia from a Jain Perspective

Religions March 2, 2026 Cogen Bohanec

The concept of biophilia—the innate human affinity for nature—is expanded by adding a mystical dimension termed spiritual biophilia, drawn from the writings of modern Jain Ācārya Śrīmad Rājcandra. The paper argues that spiritual experiences can deepen ecological connections and promote ethical stewardship of the environment. By integrating insights from ecology, mysticism, and Jain philosophy, it advocates for a holistic nurturing of both the planet and the human spirit. Śrīmad’s works support the biophilia hypothesis and link it to mystical experiences from a Jain perspective, potentially encouraging interfaith dialogue and sustainable living. The study suggests that spiritual biophilia can enrich environmental education, policy, and personal commitment to preserving the natural world.

Between Sleep and Liberation in Indian Traditions: Lucid Dreaming, Out-of-Body Experiences, and the Architectures of Liminal Consciousness

Religions February 24, 2026 Youngsun Yang

Liminal states of consciousness such as lucid dreaming and out-of-body experiences (OBEs) are not merely odd psychological events but were deliberately cultivated in Indian religious and philosophical traditions as 'architectures of liminality' to investigate self, consciousness, and reality. A comparative analysis of Vedāntic, Yogic, Buddhist, and Jain systems reveals a spectrum of interpretations: from Buddhism's mind-only projection model in dream yoga to Jainism's subtle-material interaction model in karmic ontology, and from modern neuroscience's embodied cognition to classical Indian disembodied consciousness theories. Understanding these states requires integrating first-person reports with their soteriological, ritual, and metaphysical contexts, challenging reductionist approaches in consciousness studies.

Ecosufism in the Thought of Ibn ʿArabī and Rūmī: Unity, Nature and Ecological Ethics in Sufi Metaphysics

Religions February 15, 2026 Büşra Çakmaktaş

Ecosufism, grounded in the metaphysics of Ibn ʿArabī and Rūmī, offers a theocentric account of the human–nature relationship based on unity (waḥdat) and self-disclosure (tajallī). It rejects anthropocentrism by conceiving the cosmos as a living, conscious reality and framing human responsibility through vicegerency (khilāfah), trust (amānah), and the virtue of moderation (iʿtidāl). Without claiming historical identity, ecosufism converges with modern ecological approaches such as deep ecology, panpsychism, and environmental virtue ethics, and has potential to contribute to ecological problems at theoretical and practical levels.

Navigating Sacred Soundscape in the Post-Secular Age: A Critical Analysis of the (Re)Production and Consumption of Digital Non-Traditional Religious Music Among Chinese Youth

Religions February 13, 2026 Wenwei Long

Many Chinese youth who lack formal religious beliefs engage with digital non-traditional religious music, such as electronic adaptations of the Great Compassion Mantra chant on platforms like Bilibili. Based on 15 interviews and one year of digital ethnography, the research shows that music, technology, environment, and cultural context shape youth's affective states of tranquility, trance, and transcendence. The study identifies fluid, contingent associations between these mediators and emergent, ambient affective states. It reveals hybridized practices that blend alternative spiritual elements with secular experiences, highlighting context-specific ways Chinese youth navigate spirituality in a post-secular age.

The Blessing of the Monkeys, the Whisper of Enchanted Stones: A Case Study of Indigenous Ecology in the Sacred Groves of Kerala (India) and Nagarkot (Nepal)

Religions February 12, 2026 Maciej Karasinski, Prasad Erancheri

Sacred groves in South Asia are dynamic spaces where non-human entities actively participate in spiritual and ecological processes, not merely passive backdrops for human rituals. Comparing a sacred grove in Kerala, India, and shamanic forests in Nagarkot, Nepal, the paper shows that monkeys in the Indian grove are perceived as emissaries of spiritual-natural forces that preserve the ecosystem, while trees and stones in Nepal act as spiritual guides or manifestations of nature's spirit. Combining ethnographic, botanical, and philological research, the work highlights indigenous ecological knowledge transmitted through ritual, spirit possession, trance, and visionary journeys.

Cultivating the Meditative Mind: The Philosophical Integration of Śamatha and Vipaśyanā in Early Yogācāra Thought

Religions February 6, 2026 Feifei Yan, Zhanguo Peng

The paper examines how the Yogācāra tradition systematically developed and philosophically finalized the practices of śamatha (tranquility) and vipaśyanā (insight). It focuses on two key texts: the Śrāvakabhūmi, which presents śamatha as a rigorous psychological system outlining a cognitive progression from worldly practices like impurities meditation to the nine stages of mental abiding, facilitating a metacognitive transition from distraction to absorption and the eradication of afflictions; and the Saṃdhinirmocana-sūtra, which provides the ultimate philosophical synthesis by framing these practices within the Consciousness-Only (vijñaptimātratā) framework, finalizing the meaning of training in higher mind. The analysis clarifies the evolution of Buddhist bhāvanā by bridging technical rigor with Mahāyāna ontological depth.

The Hexagram of Contemplation 觀卦 (guan gua) and “Using the Divine Way to Give Instruction” 神道設教 (shen dao she jiao) in Early China

Religions January 24, 2026 Zhiping Yu

In early Chinese religion, celestial deities, earthly spirits, and ghosts were devoutly worshipped. Oracle bone inscriptions record rituals for rain, temple worship, and river deities under terms like “fang.” The Supreme God was the paramount deity of the Shang Dynasty, merging with ancestral spirits by the early Zhou. The hexagram of Contemplation (guan gua) depicts shamans or ritual hosts performing temple sacrifices, emphasizing sincere human–Heaven communication. A monarch’s guan ritual embodies inner sincerity, prompting celestial trust, forming an interactive relationship. The hexagram’s structure highlights deities’ transcendence and humans’ reverence. Sages established religion for human life but not as leaders. From Shang through Spring and Autumn, Chinese spirituality shifted from shamanism to ritual propriety and from theistic to humanistic culture, shaping subsequent 2500 years. Confucius replaced shamanistic elements with moral experience.

Embodiment, Divinity, and New Theological Directions in William James and Ralph Barton Perry

Religions January 10, 2026 Walter Scott Stepanenko

William James attempted to reconcile empiricism with religion by advocating finite theism and a pluralistic cosmos with overlapping minds of various scales, while warning against replacing functional psychology with entitative perspectives. Ralph Barton Perry criticized James for underestimating the body's role in cognition, arguing that embodied minds are cognitively superior to social or composite minds due to their integration. Perry saw embodied cognition's emergent character as grounds for a humanistic spirituality. This article compares James and Perry on theology, arguing that Perry's emphasis on embodiment in cognitive integration illuminates a tripartite distinction between impersonal, subpersonal, and personal theologies, which scholars seeking more embodied theological approaches should consider.

Mysticism and Ethics in the Theology of Religions and Interreligious Dialogue: Re-Reading Paul Tillich and Jacques-Albert Cuttat

Religions January 2, 2026 Santiago García Mourelo

In plural and global contexts, the Theology of Religions and Interreligious Dialogue foster mutual understanding and a culture of encounter. This article examines theological and spiritual foundations through Paul Tillich and Jacques-Albert Cuttat. It reconstructs Tillich's ontological and pneumatological framework, focusing on a mystical a priori as the structural condition of religious experience. It analyzes Cuttat's model of "assumptive convergence" between Eastern and Western religious hemispheres as an experiential unfolding of Tillich's intuition. The argument holds that Cuttat anticipates Tillich's theology of religions, showing Christian mystical experience can assume, discern, and transfigure other traditions without syncretism or relativism. Mysticism emerges as a principle for articulating truth, plurality, and ethical responsibility in interreligious dialogue.

Allowing Similarities: Using Aldous Huxley’s Views on Mystical Experience to Assess the Import of Profound Unitive Experiences Occasioned by Psychedelic Substances

Religions December 22, 2025 Dana W. Sawyer

Similarities across religious traditions, particularly unitive mystical experiences, deserve scholarly attention despite decades of emphasis on differences. Aldous Huxley described such experiences as a thread running through traditions, not a core essence. Research studies with psychedelics like psilocybin regularly produce unitive experiences, offering contemporary experiential reports for mysticism scholars. Drawing on Huxley and researchers including Roland Griffiths, Jussi Jylkka, David Yaden, William Richards, and Julie Holland, the article speculates that psychedelic-induced unitive mystical experiences may benefit individuals and society.

Natural Metaphors: Expressions of Mystical Experience in John of the Cross, Etty Hillesum, and Björk

Religions December 4, 2025 Anderson Fabián Santos Meza

Mystical writings use natural metaphors—rivers, gardens, fire, wind—not as decorative language but as symbolic systems that articulate the ineffable through elemental earthly terms. This essay argues that such metaphors sustain a theology of embodiment, relationality, and transformation across epochs and artistic media, bringing together the poetry of John of the Cross, the diaries of Etty Hillesum, and the music and visual art of Björk. The work advocates for a decolonial hermeneutics that resists rigid doctrinal frameworks and colonial interpretations, recognizing mystical experience as still unfolding in the present through poetry, diary, and sound—where theology becomes a matter of vibration, beauty, and embodied openness.

The Genesis of William James’s Psychology of Religion: From ‘The Principles of Psychology’ to ‘The Varieties of Religious Experience’

Religions November 26, 2025 John R. Snarey, Eunil David Cho, Shelby L. Hall

William James's two classic works, The Principles of Psychology (1890) and The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902), are usually treated as separate, but this article argues that The Principles provides the psychological foundation for The Varieties. The authors identify ten conceptual connections between the texts, showing that James applied his principles on the brain, habit, stream of consciousness, subconscious, self, attention, association, and emotions to religious topics such as conversion experiences, mystical experiences, and saintliness. Some principles were also broadened through contact with religious data. Placing the texts in conversation yields a deeper understanding of James's psychology of religion.

Holy Spirit or Holy Psyche? Energy-Like Somatic Experiences in Contemporary Abrahamic Meditative Traditions

Religions November 10, 2025 Nathan E. Fisher, Elisabeth Irvine, Michael Z. Yonkovig et al.

Energy-like somatic sensations in the body are commonly reported across Abrahamic contemplative traditions, not only in Buddhist and Yogic contexts. In interviews with 30 practitioners and 30 teachers from Jewish, Christian, and Islamic traditions, 40% of practitioners and 43% of teachers reported such experiences. These sensations varied widely in intensity and emotional tone, interpreted either as expected signs of spiritual progress or as surprising events. Participants blended metaphors from multiple traditions and mixed spiritual with psychological explanations. Compared to earlier research on Western Buddhists, both commonalities and differences emerged. The findings suggest these experiences arise from a complex interplay of cultural frameworks, attention, and bodily processes.

Beyond the Mystical Experience Model: Theurgy as a Framework for Ritual Learning with Psychedelics

Religions November 8, 2025 André Van der Braak

The dominant 'mystical experience model' of psychedelic spirituality—which holds that ego dissolution and unitive experiences drive well-being—is critiqued for being too religious, neglecting learning processes, and privileging individual extraordinary states over shared ritual. An alternative model based on theurgy (from Iamblichus's Neoplatonism) and Bruno Latour's participatory ontological pluralism is proposed. Theurgy emphasizes ritual mediation, competence, and transformation, accommodating encounters with autonomous entities or 'beings of religion' reported in psychedelic ceremonies. This framework complements the mystical model by focusing on collective transformation within a differentiated cosmos rather than escape into undifferentiated unity.

Towards a Participatory Philosophical Religion: Foundations for a Sacramental Metaphysics of Psychedelics

Religions October 31, 2025 A Sahaf Kashani

A new philosophical religion is emerging from the intersection of psychedelic ministry, transpersonal psychology, and participatory metaphysics. Drawing on Schelling's participatory metaphysics, Grof's findings, and Ferrer's participatory turn, the article argues that psychedelics can function sacramentally, granting participatory access to the creative ground of reality. It proposes transpersonal ministry as a framework to meet the spiritual and metaphysical demands of psychedelics, offering churches, ministers, and congregants a shared language that unites experiential participation with metaphysical inquiry, providing a non-dogmatic framework for integrating transformative states.

On John M. Allegro’s Suggestion That the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil in the 12th Century Plaincourault Chapel Depicts an Amanita muscaria Mushroom

Religions October 29, 2025 Ronald V. Huggins

John Marco Allegro's 1970 book The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross argued that a 12th-century fresco in Plaincourault Chapel, France, depicting the Fall of Adam and Eve, shows a mushroom-like Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, evidence of a clandestine psychedelic mushroom sect persisting in Christian Europe since New Testament times. A small group of writers, led by Carl A. P. Ruck, later sought to validate this theory by finding other examples of psychedelic mushrooms in early Christian and medieval art. This article examines these claims, focusing on the Plaincourault tree and similar images, and concludes that the arguments fail because they overpress similarities while ignoring differences.

Subjective Configurations in Cacao Ceremonies: A Theoretical Analysis from a Latin American Cultural–Historical Psychology Perspective

Religions October 20, 2025 Rodolfo Bastián Valle-Kendall, Carlos Piñones Rivera

Cacao ceremonies, a neo-shamanic ritual growing in popularity, can foster well-being by enabling participants to reconfigure their subjectivity. Drawing on González-Rey's theory, the article argues that cacao acts as a symbolic mediator generating new subjective senses, while rituals stabilize dynamic subjective configurations. Shamans guide this process through discourse, materials, and emotions. These transformations are not mechanically determined by social context but arise as historically situated singular productions. However, the ritual is ambivalent: it can both foster genuine subjective change and reproduce neoliberal logics.

Psychedelic Mystical Experiences Are Authentic

Religions October 11, 2025 Hans van Eyghen

A philosophical paper argues that mystical experiences brought on by psychedelics should be considered authentic, not counterfeit. It examines three counterarguments: such experiences are too easily achieved, lack lasting spiritual or moral effects, and do not involve divine grace. Positive arguments for authenticity include that these experiences rely on similar neural mechanisms and are phenomenologically alike to other mystical experiences. The paper concludes that the positive arguments are more convincing, making a case for the genuineness of psychedelically induced mystical experiences.