No. I'm not. I'm merely looking at the etymologies of the word "mystic" itself. No need to muddy the waters further.
There are several problems here. You are interpreting what you think was meant, and it is interpreting it to fit your current POV. I think the word is valid, but not to mean "shutting of the brain", which is what you imply. That is not mystical experience to those who identify as mystics. I think I'll make that clearer in my next points.
Reasoning takes me quite a ways up into the night sky, and at some point awe takes over. But I'd never characterize awe as "mystical."
And when you let awe take you further and further, at that point you probably would.
You're speaking for yourself here, of course.
Yes, but let's be clear I am also speaking what others say. So I am speaking for them as well. There is a point where subjective experience becomes objective when there is a clear and consistent pattern.
No. Sorry. My mind is an inexorable part of my being. It is the very instrument by which I experience awe. It is never set aside.
And here is where I think the problem in understanding is happening. I have never, ever said "shut off the mind". The only thing you are doing is stilling the discursive, internal chatter; that constant running of texts in self-reflexive dialog of defining this or that and relating to it as objective reality. It is quieting the "what do I think about this" mechanisms, where we normally live embedded and self-identified within them as reality itself. You don't shut off the mind, you simply quite that discursive mind. Most people are not even aware of what is actually happening inside their minds this way. They mistake that dialog as the mind itself. I think that is the mistake you are making, unaware of anything else in your own mind.
When I am in meditative states for instance, my mind is not "off". It's not a "blank". That is a deep misunderstanding of what is going on. My mind is quiet, but I am very, very aware. Much more aware than when you normally live within a bloody rock concert blaring inside your head (you only realize how noisy it is in there once you can actually see what's been going on the whole time which appears "normal" to most everyone). The reason you're more aware is because there is less static, lest debris clouding the mind. It's like taking the car through the wash and looking out through a clean window, which you had previously just learned to adapt your eyes to all the dirt on it, subconsciously adjusting to it as "normal".
So when I describe mystical states, what that is is higher and higher states of awareness, deeper and deeper into that experience of awe as you cited. You yourself admit that something else "takes over" at the end of the rational's abilities to penetrate. That is what I am saying. But the rabbit hole goes deep indeed! Infinitely deep. And that depth is the experience of the mystical. Awe is the first step, the opening of the deep.
If it isn't in conflict, I wonder why you've bothered to forge distinctions.
It is others who make the distinctions. I am trying to talk to those to show what is beyond them.
Why? Because (so far) mysticism has utterly failed to distinguish itself as anything more than an unsubstantiated, soggy-brained load of rubbish.
Have you ever meditated?
Seriously, calling what I'm talking about as soggy-brained, is just plain ignorant.
I make no apologies for believing that atheism is a more rational worldview than theism and its imaginary friends in the sky or mysticism and its hoodoo voodoo.
When you define everything as the pre-rational mythic thought it will appear as that. But is it as black and white as all that? No, of course not. I'm not speaking of Zeus here.
Forgive me for saying so, but that last bit had so much woo leaking out at the seams that it was difficult to parse out what you were actually trying to say.
Why is it "rational" atheists feel a need to insult others if they are truly rational? I guarantee, you will find no "woo" in me. It's your understanding that is deficient here.
Oh please. Enough with the Einstein quotes. They're not special. Einstein also said:
"The mystical trend of our time, which shows itself particularly in the rampant growth of the so-called Theosophy and Spiritualism, is for me no more than a symptom of weakness and confusion. Since our inner experiences consist of reproductions, and combinations of sensory impressions, the concept of a soul without a body seem to me to be empty and devoid of meaning."
Spiritualism is "a symptom of weakness and confusion." Read that bit again and again until it sinks in.
This also fits in with why I quoted Einstein. I agree with what he is saying here too! Spiritualism he was referring to was that practice in his day of communing with the dead. His criticism is my criticism as well of "New Age" type metaphysics. I cited Einstein because he is speaking of the mystical beyond the New Age'y metaphysical fluff. It might behoove you to trying to understand how these quotes from him fit together. I understand, but you would be hard pressed to make them fit together I believe.
"The most incomprehensible thing about the world is that it is comprehensible."
I hope that we can agree that comprehension is a product of the rational mind?
Sure, but his is speaking about the world, the natural world of physics. That's not what he was referencing in the other quote however. If he was, then calling it Mysterious, saying our dull minds could not penetrate it, would be a contradiction. His complaint was about pseudoscience and trying to use magic to interpret the natural world. But there is more to ones "being", than physics. And Einstein knew that.
Again, I'm not exempting anyone from a sense of awe. I'm just not leaping up to conflate awe and mysticism.
If you define mysticism as men in red hats with special knots in their underwear in special clubs, then I would agree. I think that's baby pablum. I embrace rationality. But to say that is the "ultimate" mode of knowing one's own being, is frankly kind of baby pablum too. It's integrally important, but to call that the height of all knowing and knowledge is kind of adolescent, thinking you've got things all figured out now.
Unless you're saying "Wow!" or busily swearing to express your @#$%^&* sense of awe, of course. The night sky isn't exactly a public library. No need to "shush" people.
What the hell are you talking about?
Again, I'm not advocating against awe. I simply refuse to (mis-)characterize it as "mystical."
Again, awe is the beginning, the opening. Enter within awe, and see what you might call it. I think the word is valid, and it does not mean "woo".