2020
DOI: 10.1177/1354067x20922139
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The numinous experience in the context of psychopathology and traumatic stress studies

Abstract: The psychological phenomenon of a suddenly appearing, extremely enigmatic, and at the same time fascinating state in which one feels influenced by higher powers was described as a “numinous experience” by R. Otto and C. G. Jung. This condition is one of those subjectively non-rational experiences that have so far received little attention in cultural clinical psychology and yet have great potency to explain psychopathological phenomena. In the first section of this paper, we work towards a contemporary psychol… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…With the use of the imagery in movement method, however, participants were not required to draw upon a refined conceptual framework or vocabulary to express their lived experience, since they could initially appeal to nonverbal expression in their work of art, which in turn gave them permission to find ways to express their experience through metaphor and analogy, and eventually as well, through story or narrative description. This strength of the imagery in movement method suggests it could be a useful tool for exploring other phenomena that are known to pose challenges as a result of their relative ineffability—for example, mystical experiences or trauma (Braud, 2002; Franke, 2007; Lonneker & Maercker, 2021).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With the use of the imagery in movement method, however, participants were not required to draw upon a refined conceptual framework or vocabulary to express their lived experience, since they could initially appeal to nonverbal expression in their work of art, which in turn gave them permission to find ways to express their experience through metaphor and analogy, and eventually as well, through story or narrative description. This strength of the imagery in movement method suggests it could be a useful tool for exploring other phenomena that are known to pose challenges as a result of their relative ineffability—for example, mystical experiences or trauma (Braud, 2002; Franke, 2007; Lonneker & Maercker, 2021).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Authors have proposed an array of influences for different types of belief. The role of mental health in the context, catalyst, or content of altered-anomalous experiences and spirituality is a prime area (Johnson & Friedman, 2008;Koenig, 2012;O'Reilly, 2004), with adverse life events in childhood or adulthood being especially well-documented correlates of paranormal beliefs and anomalous experiences (Berkowski & MacDonald, 2014;Irwin, 1992Irwin, , 1993Irwin, , 1994Lawrence et al, 1995;Lönneker & Maercker, 2021;Rabeyron & Loose, 2015). But the way that drivers of beliefs and experiences have been studied, of course, depends on how those beliefs are perceived in the first place.…”
Section: Focus Area A: Drivers Of Darker Religio-spiritual Beliefs Or...mentioning
confidence: 99%