Merriam-Webster defines "
mystical" as "having a spiritual meaning that is difficult to see or understand" or "mysterious."
Question:
Do you believe in the
mystical? That is, do you believe there is something that
has spiritual meaning that is difficult to see or understand? That there is something that is
mysterious and defies any attempt at a complete explanation?
That's not the definition of "naturalistic." A naturalistic explanation is naturalistic. A nonnaturalistic (e.g. supernaturalistic or mystical) explanation is not naturalistic. (You might be able to argue that a supernaturalistic explanation does not qualify as a scientific explanation. But that's entirely a different matter whether a supernaturalistic or mystical explanation qualifies as an explanation.)
To tie all of these quotes in together, quantum physics/particles and the human brain are 2 things in everyday life that I would consider mystical and not mystical at the same time. Almost everyone can conceive the concept and basic mechanics and ideas of how they work but in actual application and the so called "finer details", we have no idea exactly how the brain functions, or how certain aspects of quantum mechanics work. So we can explain certain aspects of both of them naturalisticly, other parts not so much as of yet. And when you combine the two together, it becomes even more so. And I believe this will become more prevalent as science progresses in the study biophotonics, and the role that photons play in regulating body/brain function. I mean, quantum neuroscience, it just sounds mystically natural
.
And to add a question of my own, is something naturalistic or mystical if we know that something works but not how and/or why it works?
"Mystical" means different things to different people. Some folks use the word to refer to paranormal stuff, like clairvoyance or remote viewing. Others use it to refer to the experience of the oneness of all things that apparently occurs when subject/object perception abruptly ceases while experiencing in some sense continues. And other folks mean other things by the term.
Interestingly enough, I have had that experience of oneness when subject/object perception abruptly cease while you continue to experience. And I have had that unique experience in 2 different ways, which is interesting in and of itself. In seeking to explain these experiences rationally, I came across 2 articles concerning particular areas of brain function, one was actually on a nordic berserker cite interestingly enough, and the other a scientific study seeking to describe the experience of oneness/union with the divine.
The berserker web cite sighted a specific area of the brain, I'll see if I can post the article, that controls the identification of self, visio-spatial recogniton of the body in space, and the hypothesis was that through concious (over)activation of this part of the brain the berserker was able to enter into a state of self oneness (lack of recgonition of anything but the self/emptiness).
The other article, which has some neuroimaging and scientific analysis, states that when the experienced meditator entered the state of oneness, that same area of the brain became almostly completely inactive, thus releasing the mind of the concept of bodily awareness, and by all acounts literally becoming one with the universe, as the brain is not percieveing any conception of self.
Now I can describe how both of these states felt in pretty good detail, and I could give you a pretty idea of why both of them happen in terms of brain function, but I have no clue as to how to tell you to induce these states in your own being. The experience of the states myself was definitely what I would qualify as mystical, as they were unlike anything I felt before or have felt since, but at the same time I can give you a (fairly
) scientific explenation as to what causes them.
So at the end of the day, is an experience of oneness with the universe not mystical because it can be explained by a scientific proccess of specific brain function?
Yes, that is true. We lose it when growing up via our social indoctrination.
I would have to say that everyone is always having a mystical experience all the time, but most do not realize it, as they see the world through conditioned mind. The mystical experience is the realization of divine union, but we are never separated from it; we only think we are, or that it is non-existent. The mundane world we call 'reality', is, in fact, the Miraculous itself, which we fail to notice, just as the fish born into the sea fails to notice the sea itself. His focus, like ours, is on the immediate foreground of existence, while ignoring the background. It is this background of existence out of which Everything is emerging, and to which Everything returns. To realize this, and our connection to it, is to realize the mystical.
Well said!!!! When you shut up and listen the universe is the best conversationalist. And whoever said that comedy is divine hit the nail right on the head, cuz that guy is funny as hell, and he be joking about serious *** **** , and still make you laugh.