lovemuffin
τὸν ἄρτον τοῦ ἔρωτος
But you wouldn't deny that belief itself can be (and in fact must be) experienced ... that the act of believing must be experienced to be meaningful?
Sure. I'm not sure where we're going with this though. It seems like there might be a misunderstanding about the reason for drawing the original distinction between experience and belief. The distinction is for two reasons:
The first is just to emphasize that the mystical is not abstract and theoretical. It's something to be experienced and not just talked about abstractly. There is a necessary relation between experience and belief. We form beliefs about our experiences, but that doesn't mean the two are the same.
The second is that it is intended to emphasize that beliefs about mystical experiences are provisional and conditioned in all sorts of ways (by memory, prior beliefs, culture, religion, etc) while experiences themselves are unmediated in a way similar to the experience of the senses. It is "ecstatic" in a way. To those who believe that some experience they've had is mystical, especially in the sense of being some kind of touch with reality in an "ultimate" way, the point in making the distinction is to acknowledge that experience is indeed unmediated and ultimate, but to point out that the interpretations and beliefs we form about it are not. The beliefs are not absolute.
So empty claims regarding allegedly spooky stuff will always be just claims, correct? Because the very minute that any of these claims were substantiated, they'd also cease to be mystical, no?
I should acknowledge that people use "mystical" in different ways, and I can't claim to offer the objectively correct definition, but in my view mystical experience doesn't have to involve anything "spooky". I don't really have in mind the paranormal or supernatural. More like "intuitions of the numinous", or the feeling you might have contemplating the sheer scope and size of the universe while looking up at the stars, or at a flower, or the depth of love you might feel for a particular person that seems to go beyond emotion or infatuation. To an extent, I think all of those experiences have explanations which substantiate them. You could talk about neurotransmitters and evolutionary biology or whatever, and I might accept those explanations as to why I have a certain experience in certain situations, but they would still, for me, involve a mystical element that does not reduce to those explanations.
There are also plenty of people who're ready to offer equally sincere (and equally unsubstantiated) testimony that they've been abducted by aliens or that they've been reincarnated. So what?
For me, the "so what" is that a certain kind of experience leads to convictions and a way of life which I find much more fulfilling than a life without it.