Learning to Discern the Voices of Gods, Spirits, Tulpas, and the Dead

Author:

Luhrmann Tanya M1ORCID,Alderson-Day Ben2ORCID,Chen Ann3,Corlett Philip4,Deeley Quinton5,Dupuis David6,Lifshitz Michael7,Moseley Peter8ORCID,Peters Emmanuelle9,Powell Adam10,Powers Albert11ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology, Stanford University , Stanford, CA , USA

2. Department of Psychology, Durham University , Durham , UK

3. Department of Psychiatry, University of California , San Francisco, CA , USA

4. Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, Wu Tsai Institute, Yale University , New Haven, CT , USA

5. Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience, King’s College London, Department of Forensic & Neurodevelopmental Sciences , London , UK

6. Quai Branly Museum (Paris), Research Department , Paris , France

7. Division of Social and Transcultural Psychiatry, McGill University , Montreal , Canada

8. Department of Psychology, Northumbria University , Newcastle upon Tyne , UK

9. Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience, King’s College London, Department of Psychology , London , UK

10. Department of Theology and Religion, Durham University , Durham , UK

11. Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine , New Haven, Connecticut , USA

Abstract

Abstract There are communities in which hearing voices frequently is common and expected, and in which participants are not expected to have a need for care. This paper compares the ideas and practices of these communities. We observe that these communities utilize cultural models to identify and to explain voice-like events—and that there are some common features to these models across communities. All communities teach participants to “discern,” or identify accurately, the legitimate voice of the spirit or being who speaks. We also observe that there are roughly two methods taught to participants to enable them to experience spirits (or other invisible beings): trained attention to inner experience, and repeated speech to the invisible other. We also observe that all of these communities model a learning process in which the ability to hear spirit (or invisible others) becomes more skilled with practice, and in which what they hear becomes clearer over time. Practice—including the practice of discernment—is presumed to change experience. We also note that despite these shared cultural ideas and practices, there is considerable individual variation in experience—some of which may reflect psychotic process, and some perhaps not. We suggest that voice-like events in this context may be shaped by cognitive expectation and trained practice as well as an experiential pathway. We also suggest that researchers could explore these common features both as a way to help those struggling with psychosis, and to consider the possibility that expectations and practice may affect the voice-hearing experience.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

Reference38 articles.

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3. Psychosis as a transdiagnostic and extended phenotype in the general population;van Os;World Psychiatry,2016

4. Auditory verbal hallucinations and continuum models of psychosis: a systematic review of the healthy voice-hearer literature;Baumeister;Clin Psychol Rev,2017

5. Diversity within the psychotic continuum;Luhrmann;Schizophr Bull,2017

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