Abstract

AbstractThere are three models of pain in the phenomenology of religious experience. The first model suggests that pain is instrumental to attaining the desired religious experience. The second model proposes that pain is constitutive of the desired religious experience. The third model, which is a model of senseless pain in religious experience, is underdeveloped. I provide an exposition of this model in this article. I also give four arguments for the necessity of affirming senseless pain in the phenomenology of religious experience. First, affirming senseless pain in religious experience provides a way to describe the process of purpose attribution to pain qua a sensation or a feeling. Second, such an affirmation also provides a way for describing the meaning formation in religious experience through interpreting pain qua symbol. Third, the affirmation is also necessary to maintain continuity between mundane and religious experiences. There are instances of senseless pain in the literature on tragedy, chronic pain, and torture. Maintaining continuity between ordinary and religious experiences via the notion of senseless pain opens the possibility of developing mysticism in everyday life. Lastly, the presence of the unknown in senseless pain makes room for mystery in religious experience.

Highlights

  • There are three models of pain in the phenomenology of religious experience

  • This article is a discussion on senseless pain in the phenomenology of religious experience

  • I have argued that affirming the existence of teleologically senseless pain in the phenomenology of religious experience should be done for four reasons

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Summary

Three models of pain in religious experience

The properties of religious experience are usually described in terms that are considered desirable. McNamara lists seventeen common features of religious experience, including a deeply felt positive mood, a sense of sacredness, euphoria, and an encounter with God.[1] How does pain play a role in the. Senseless Pain in the Phenomenology of Religious Experience 511 phenomenology of religious experience? The current literature on religious experience offers us three models of pain.[2] Senseless Pain in the Phenomenology of Religious Experience 511 phenomenology of religious experience? The current literature on religious experience offers us three models of pain.[2]

The instrumental and the constitutive models of pain
Senseless pain
Pain as a sensation or a feeling
Pain as a symbol
Continuity with nonreligious experiences
Making room for mystery
Objections and replies
Conclusion
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