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Originally Posted by Lightkeeper
Are science and mysticism joining hands and reinforcing each other. Will theology disappear or will the stories continue to be pointers?
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Well, I've been saying for quite some time, arguing against literalist/mythical conceptions of "God" is an easy argument, but that the concepts really associated with mystical insight are the areas that need to be studied, and it is the fact that both atheists and traditional theists love the mythical expression, is the only real reason there is a perceived "conflict" at all.
That said, I've always thought of mysticism as a type of science, not a separate discipline. Science is a method which can be applied to different categories (i.e., empirical, psychological, contemplative), but, unfortunately, is too often thought of as "materialism", and any science that is not materialist is not science. Where does theology fit in? I'd place that study between psychology and mysticism, in much the same manner I would place biology between physics and psychology. Meaning, theology is the study of the relationship between the temporal and the eternal, whereas mysticism is the direct experience of the eternal. So as long as we attempt to
explain the contemplative realm, we have a theology of some type. This is different from unmediated experience of mysticism.
I'm reading a book titled,
The Spiritual Brain. Its co-authored by a PhD neuroscientist who describes himself as a "nonmaterialist". Its a bit too one sided for my tastes (I'm an integralist), but offers some compelling counter arguments to the materialist claims of "god switches, god regions, god helmets, and so on and so forth". I'll comment more on that when I have finished it.
-TC