Transliminality: Comparing Mystical and Psychotic Experiences on Psycho-Phenomenological Grounds

On a phenomenal level, no differences between the mystical and the initial sequence of psychotic experience are to be found. Both are characterized by transliminality (i.e., an experience of consciousness transcending both the psychophysical and the rational realms). However, the situation is differ...

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Main Author: Feise-Mahnkopp Patricia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2020-12-01
Series:Open Theology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/opth-2020-0140
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spelling doaj-3609b8e6db2240dea370d3ac80ffd8e22021-10-02T19:11:23ZengDe GruyterOpen Theology2300-65792020-12-016172073810.1515/opth-2020-0140opth-2020-0140Transliminality: Comparing Mystical and Psychotic Experiences on Psycho-Phenomenological GroundsFeise-Mahnkopp Patricia0Department of Education, Institute of Philosophical Education and Aesthetics, Alfter bei Bonn, GermanyOn a phenomenal level, no differences between the mystical and the initial sequence of psychotic experience are to be found. Both are characterized by transliminality (i.e., an experience of consciousness transcending both the psychophysical and the rational realms). However, the situation is different if we integrate psychodynamic implications before and after those experiences into the comparison. One difference on this level is that the mystical experience (if it meets sufficient ego stability) primarily offers personality-strengthening potential. In contrast, transliminality, which occurs in the course of psychotic experience (if it encounters insufficient ego-stability or a pronounced vulnerability), primarily offers personality-weakening potential. However, if the therapeutic process succeeds in setting ego-stabilizing impulses (or eliminating thought and affect disorders which are typical for psychoses of the schizophrenic spectrum), a conscious incorporation of the transliminal experience into the further therapeutic process proves to be helpful, too. The essential philosophical and therapeutic significance of the connections analyzed here are reflected on with the help of philosophical and psycho(patho)logical phenomenology, in particular with the writings of Husserl’s and Pfänder’s pupil Gerda Walther, combined with current theorems of responsive phenomenology. Walther’s insights into the (dys-)functionalities of ego-center (“Ichzentrum”), self (“Einbettung des Ichzentrums”), and basic essence (“Grundwesen”) in mystical and psychotic experience, with respect to their (meta-)transcendental relationship with divine essence (“göttlicher Wesensgrund”) provoke further research questions on the constitutive and therapeutic implications of transliminality in the context of mystical and psychotic experience.https://doi.org/10.1515/opth-2020-0140phenomenologymystical experiencepsycho(patho)logytherapy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Feise-Mahnkopp Patricia
spellingShingle Feise-Mahnkopp Patricia
Transliminality: Comparing Mystical and Psychotic Experiences on Psycho-Phenomenological Grounds
Open Theology
phenomenology
mystical experience
psycho(patho)logy
therapy
author_facet Feise-Mahnkopp Patricia
author_sort Feise-Mahnkopp Patricia
title Transliminality: Comparing Mystical and Psychotic Experiences on Psycho-Phenomenological Grounds
title_short Transliminality: Comparing Mystical and Psychotic Experiences on Psycho-Phenomenological Grounds
title_full Transliminality: Comparing Mystical and Psychotic Experiences on Psycho-Phenomenological Grounds
title_fullStr Transliminality: Comparing Mystical and Psychotic Experiences on Psycho-Phenomenological Grounds
title_full_unstemmed Transliminality: Comparing Mystical and Psychotic Experiences on Psycho-Phenomenological Grounds
title_sort transliminality: comparing mystical and psychotic experiences on psycho-phenomenological grounds
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Theology
issn 2300-6579
publishDate 2020-12-01
description On a phenomenal level, no differences between the mystical and the initial sequence of psychotic experience are to be found. Both are characterized by transliminality (i.e., an experience of consciousness transcending both the psychophysical and the rational realms). However, the situation is different if we integrate psychodynamic implications before and after those experiences into the comparison. One difference on this level is that the mystical experience (if it meets sufficient ego stability) primarily offers personality-strengthening potential. In contrast, transliminality, which occurs in the course of psychotic experience (if it encounters insufficient ego-stability or a pronounced vulnerability), primarily offers personality-weakening potential. However, if the therapeutic process succeeds in setting ego-stabilizing impulses (or eliminating thought and affect disorders which are typical for psychoses of the schizophrenic spectrum), a conscious incorporation of the transliminal experience into the further therapeutic process proves to be helpful, too. The essential philosophical and therapeutic significance of the connections analyzed here are reflected on with the help of philosophical and psycho(patho)logical phenomenology, in particular with the writings of Husserl’s and Pfänder’s pupil Gerda Walther, combined with current theorems of responsive phenomenology. Walther’s insights into the (dys-)functionalities of ego-center (“Ichzentrum”), self (“Einbettung des Ichzentrums”), and basic essence (“Grundwesen”) in mystical and psychotic experience, with respect to their (meta-)transcendental relationship with divine essence (“göttlicher Wesensgrund”) provoke further research questions on the constitutive and therapeutic implications of transliminality in the context of mystical and psychotic experience.
topic phenomenology
mystical experience
psycho(patho)logy
therapy
url https://doi.org/10.1515/opth-2020-0140
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