806:
People susceptible to mystical psychosis become much more impressible. They feel a unification with society, with the world, God, and also feel washing out the perceptive and conceptual borders. Similarity of mystical psychosis to mystical experience is expressed in sudden, distinct and very strong
798:
On the basis of comparison of mystical experience and psychotic experience, Deikman came to a conclusion that mystical experience can be caused by "deautomatization" or transformation of habitual psychological structures which organize, limit, select and interpret perceptional incentives that is
790:
A first episode of mystical psychosis is often very frightening, confusing and distressing, particularly because it is an unfamiliar experience. For example, researchers have found that people experiencing paranormal and mystical phenomena report many of the symptoms of
763:
According to
Deikman, and authors from a number of disciplines, psychotic experience need not be considered pathological, especially if consideration is given to the values and beliefs of the individual concerned.
772:
Deikman thought the mystical experience was brought about through a "deautomatization" or undoing of habitual psychological structures that organize, limit, select, and interpret perceptual stimuli.
1193:
1077:
Jackson, M., & Fulford, K.W.M. (2003). "Psychosis good and bad: Values-based practice and the distinction between pathological and nonpathological forms of psychotic experience".
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transition to a receptive mode. It is characterized with easing the subjectâobject distinction, sensitivity increase and nonverbal, lateral, intuitive thought processes.
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1139:
Thalbourne, M.A. & Maltby, J., M; Maltby, J (2008). "Transliminality, thin boundaries, Unusual
Experiences, and temporal lobe lability".
803:. He described usual symptoms of mystical psychosis which consist in strengthening of a receptive mode and weakening of a mode of action.
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and psychiatric frustration, in many respects defined the relation to mystical experiences in modern psychology and psychiatry.
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Thalbourne, M. A., & Fox, B. (1999). "Paranormal and mystical experience: The role of panic attacks and
Kundalini".
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172:
1047:
1331:
Hood, Ralph W.; Peter C. Hill & Bernard Spilka (2009). The psychology of religion : An empirical approach
521:
454:
960:
Jackson, M., & Fulford, K.W.M., K. W. M.; Jackson, Mike (1997). "Spiritual experience and psychopathology".
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643:
775:
There may be several causes of deautomatizationâexposure to severe stress, substance abuse or withdrawal, and
821:
Deikman considered that all-encompassing unity opened in mysticism can be all-encompassing unity of reality.
787:
A closely related category is mystical experience with psychotic features, proposed by David Lukoff in 1985.
1127:'Psychopathology', 'Psychosis' and the Kundalini: 'postmodern' perspectives on unusual subjective experience
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The
Phenomenology of the Psychotic Break and Huxley's Trip: Substance Use and the Onset of Psychosis
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Brett, C. (2003). "Psychotic and mystical states of being: Connections and distinctions".
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Deikman's opinion that experience of mystical experience in itself can't be a sign to
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Lukoff, D (155â181). "The diagnosis of mystical experience with psychotic features".
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The
Relationship Between Schizophrenia & Mysticism: A Bibliographic Essay
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814:, even in case of this experience at the persons susceptible to
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in the early 1970s to characterize first-person accounts of
1313:. Associated University Presses, 1996. 850pp. Hardcover.
1265:
Journal of the
American Society for Psychical Research
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experiences that are strikingly similar to reports of
1311:Falk, Avner, A Psychoanalytic History of the Jews
941:Personal accounts: Mania as spiritual emergency
1300:. Archives of General Psychiatry, 25, 481â489.
1213:Deikman, A J (1971). "Bimodal consciousness".
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1281:: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
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962:Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology
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1192:Nelson, B. & Sass, L. A. (2008). "
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1141:Personality and Individual Differences
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1227:10.1001/archpsyc.1971.01750180001001
689:Evolutionary psychology of religion
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799:interfaced to heavy stresses and
16:Type of abnormal mental condition
1333:(4th ed.). New York: Guilford.
1181:Hallucinogens and Schizophrenia
1215:Archives of General Psychiatry
832:Altered state of consciousness
1:
896:Posttraumatic stress disorder
674:Cognitive science of religion
488:Proto-Indo-Iranian religion
173:Spiritual but not religious
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1153:10.1016/j.paid.2008.01.022
768:Causes of Deautomatization
679:Neuroscience of religion
644:True self and false self
1296:Deikman, A. J. (1971).
1065:Mysticism and Psychosis
1043:Sandra Stahlman(1992)"
162:New religious movement
1298:Bimodal Consciousness
1091:10.1353/ppp.2003.0059
1023:10.1353/ppp.2003.0053
974:10.1353/ppp.1997.0002
939:Whitney, E. (1998). "
891:Near-death experience
619:Humanistic psychology
420:Esoteric Christianity
264:Spiritual development
237:Spiritual development
1125:Richard House(2001)"
945:Psychiatric Services
901:Religious experience
783:Mystical experiences
743:is a term coined by
465:Theosophical Society
445:Comparative religion
353:Perennial philosophy
214:Religious experience
192:Spiritual experience
167:Secular spirituality
1252:. 17 / #2: 481â489.
1063:TomĂĄs Agosin(1989)"
629:Positive psychology
329:Western esotericism
292:Divine illumination
204:Mystical experience
1050:2009-05-05 at the
861:Jerusalem syndrome
856:DhyÄna in Hinduism
851:DhyÄna in Buddhism
846:Existential crisis
816:neurophysiological
741:Mystical psychosis
684:Geschwind syndrome
669:Mystical psychosis
363:Emanuel Swedenborg
259:Spiritual activism
254:Self-actualization
224:Spiritual practice
157:Buddhist modernism
1339:978-1-60623-303-0
1319:978-0-8386-3660-2
837:Depersonalization
745:Arthur J. Deikman
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582:Other non-Western
385:Transcendentalism
219:Religious ecstasy
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906:Spiritualism
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662:Neurological
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527:Kevala jnana
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483:Pre-historic
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415:Spiritualism
390:Universalism
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324:Neoplatonism
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34:Spirituality
18:
950:: 1547â1548
624:Mindfulness
542:Neo-Vedanta
460:Orientalism
450:Neo-Advaita
438:Orientalist
395:New Thought
380:Romanticism
358:Jakob Böhme
319:Hermeticism
302:Panentheism
79:Traditional
1351:Categories
928:References
759:Background
532:Madhyamaka
455:Nonduality
314:Gnosticism
274:Influences
179:Syncretism
1362:Psychosis
1357:Mysticism
1341:. p. 372.
1321:. p. 417.
1271:: 99â115.
1203:: 346â355
1099:142858156
1031:145696666
968:: 41â66.
881:Mysticism
749:psychotic
634:Self-help
594:Shamanism
563:East-Asia
557:Yogachara
410:Occultism
400:Theosophy
341:Mysticism
308:Antiquity
297:Pantheism
244:Ego death
126:Mysticism
114:Christian
1048:Archived
982:28927599
886:Monomyth
825:See also
753:mystical
702:Category
654:Research
599:Totemism
335:Medieval
119:Catholic
107:Hasidism
102:Kabbalah
97:Merkabah
65:Timeline
51:Religion
26:a series
24:Part of
1235:5141366
589:Animism
425:New Age
368:Pietism
287:General
282:Western
60:History
41:Outline
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871:Moksha
569:Taoism
547:Tantra
537:Moksha
374:Modern
150:Modern
131:Sufism
92:Jewish
1095:S2CID
1027:S2CID
978:S2CID
921:Wujud
506:India
478:Asian
1335:ISBN
1315:ISBN
1283:link
1231:PMID
1167:link
1113:link
996:link
839:and
552:Yoga
494:Iran
1223:doi
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