SUGGESTION: Religious Experience: Implications for What Is Real (Cambridge Studies in Religion, Phil

MJ. Smith
MJ. Smith MVP Posts: 54,882
edited December 2024 in English Forum

Amazon.com: Religious Experience: Implications for What Is Real (Cambridge Studies in Religion, Philosophy, and Society): 9781108423717: Wiebe, Phillip H.: Books

In another thread, I was surprised by the degree to which human experience was ignored when incompatible with the current scientism of the Western first world. As the primary book I knew on the topic is decades old and Buddhist oriented (Fritz Staal), I asked a friend for a recommendation. This is it as a way to consider/study religious experiences.

Amazon blurb:

[quote]In this book, Phillip Wiebe examines religious, spiritual, and mystical experiences, assessing how these experiences appear to implicate a spiritual order. Despite the current prevalence of naturalism and atheism, he argues that experiences purporting to have a religious or spiritual significance deserve close empirical investigation. Wiebe surveys the broad scope of religious experience and considers different types of evidence that might give rise to a belief in phenomena such as spirits, paranormal events, God, and an afterlife. He demonstrates that there are different explanations and interpretations of religious experiences, both because they are typically personal accounts, and they suggest a reality that is often unobservable. Wiebe also addresses how to evaluate evidence for theories that postulate unobservables in general, and a Theory of Spirits in particular. Calling for more rigorous investigation of these phenomena, Wiebe frames the study of religious experience among other accepted social sciences that seek to understand religion.

Vote at: Religious Experience: Implications for What Is Real (Cambridge Studies in Religion, Philosophy, and Society) by Phillip H. Wiebe | Faithlife

Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."