Abstract
AbstractTwo brief Late Antique religious texts, respectively by the monk Theophanis and by Monoimus the Arab, present an interesting problem of whether they embody the authors’ experience, or whether they are merely literary constructs. Rather than approaching this issue through the lens of theory, the article shows how phenomenological analysis and studies of living subjectivity can be engaged with the text in order to clarify the contents of introspective experience and the genesis of its religious connotations. The analysis uncovers a previously unnoticed form of embodied introspective religious experience which is structured as a ladder with a distinct internal structure with the high degree of synchronic and diachronic stability. This approach also helps one identify the specific introspective techniques in the canonical and non-canonical literature of early Christian tradition, as related to the concepts of “theosis” and “kenosys”, as well as to suggest some neurological correspondents of religious cognition.
Reference86 articles.
1. & Via Kundalini : Psychosomatic excursions in transpersonal psychology The Humanistic;Louchakova;Psychologist,2003
2. Ian Introspection : The Tipping Point Consciousness and;Jack;Cognition,2013
3. June de and Michelle Leanne Moulds Involuntary cognitions in everyday life : exploration of type quality content and function Frontiers of;Krans;Psychiatry,2015
4. Larissa and From the Phenomenology to the Mechanisms of Consciousness : Integrated Information Theory PLoS;Oizumi;Comput Biol,2014
5. The Yoga of Hesychasm;Cutsinger;Parabola,2005
Cited by
12 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献