In your first post, your description of the theist getting closer to god with the "right beliefs" speaks more to orthodoxy than it does to truth. Orthodoxy doesn't necessarily lead to being closer to god,but being closer to truth does.
In that sense, it isn't agnosticism about the existence of god that brings people closer to god but agnosticism as in not just accepting something because that's what's typically taught. This is probably because an open mind like that it isn't going to be overly attached to beliefs and draw more so on spiritual experience (even across religious lines).
I would say that normal waking consciousness is more than just dualism. Most mystical experiences are dualistic to some degree, in that there is a perception of self and phenomena the self is having happen to it. Very few people actually have ever had a full 100% nondual experience. I believe to actually do that someone has to basically be very close to Moksha in the fullest sense.
To add to this:
I don't feel comfortable saying that dualists can't be close or "as close" to god. There are many ways to perceive the same truth even if the source itself is nondual. Add to that if all is divine, then dualism can be a valid way to experience god anyway.
I also think that @Tumah is generally right with that alternative. People's beliefs and emotional states shape how they experience mysticism and what symbols and things they see and experience. It would be very presumptuous of us to assume that only the people who had experiences like ours are having the "real" ones.
In that sense, it isn't agnosticism about the existence of god that brings people closer to god but agnosticism as in not just accepting something because that's what's typically taught. This is probably because an open mind like that it isn't going to be overly attached to beliefs and draw more so on spiritual experience (even across religious lines).
The mystical experience is here defined as the kind of experiencing that comes about when normal, everyday consciousness (i.e. subject/object perception) abruptly ends while some form of experiencing continues.
In this context, the notion of "becoming closer to god" refers to having that sort of mystical experience.
I would say that normal waking consciousness is more than just dualism. Most mystical experiences are dualistic to some degree, in that there is a perception of self and phenomena the self is having happen to it. Very few people actually have ever had a full 100% nondual experience. I believe to actually do that someone has to basically be very close to Moksha in the fullest sense.
To add to this:
That is assuming that all mystical experiences are essentially the same. The alternative is that beliefs will determine the form that the mystical experience will take.
I don't feel comfortable saying that dualists can't be close or "as close" to god. There are many ways to perceive the same truth even if the source itself is nondual. Add to that if all is divine, then dualism can be a valid way to experience god anyway.
I also think that @Tumah is generally right with that alternative. People's beliefs and emotional states shape how they experience mysticism and what symbols and things they see and experience. It would be very presumptuous of us to assume that only the people who had experiences like ours are having the "real" ones.