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- Mystical_psychosis abstract "Mystical psychosis is a term coined by Arthur J. Deikman in the early 1970s to characterize first-person accounts of psychotic experiences that are strikingly similar to reports of mystical experiences. According to Deikman, and authors from a number of disciplines, psychotic experience need not be considered pathological, especially if consideration is given to the values and beliefs of the individual concerned. Deikman thought the mystical experience was brought about through a "deautomatization" or undoing of habitual psychological structures that organize, limit, select, and interpret perceptual stimuli. There may be several causes of deautomatization—exposure to severe stress, substance abuse or withdrawal, and mood disorders.A first episode of mystical psychosis is often very frightening, confusing and distressing, particularly because it is an unfamiliar experience. For example, researchers have found that people experiencing paranormal and mystical phenomena report many of the symptoms of panic attacks.On the basis of comparison of mystical experience and psychotic experience Deikman came to a conclusion that mystical experience can be caused by "deautomatization" or transformation of habitual psychological structures which organize, limit, select and interpret perceptional incentives that is interfaced to heavy stresses and emotional shocks. He described usual symptoms of mystical psychosis which consist in strengthening of a receptive mode and weakening of a mode of action.People susceptible to mystical psychosis become much more impressible. They feel a unification with society, with the world, God, and also feel washing out the perseptive and conceptual borders. Similarity of mystical psychosis to mystical experience is expressed in sudden, distinct and very strong transition to a receptive mode. It is charachterized with easing the subject - object distinction, sensitivity increase and nonverbal, lateral, intuitive thought processes.Deikman's opinion that experience of mystical experience in itself can't be a sign to psychopathology, even in case of this experience at the persons susceptible to neurophysiological and psychiatric frustration, in many respects defined the relation to mystical experiences in modern psychology and psychiatry.Deikman considered that all-encompassing unity opened in mysticism can be all-encompassing unity of reality.".
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageID "22191402".
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageLength "6637".
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageOutDegree "25".
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageRevisionID "673562902".
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Altered_state_of_consciousness.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_J._Deikman.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mysticism.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Category:Psychosis.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Depersonalization.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Derealization.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Dhyana_in_Hinduism.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Dhyāna_in_Buddhism.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Dhyāna_in_Hinduism.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Existential_crisis.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Jerusalem_syndrome.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Mental_health.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Mirror_neuron.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Mirror_neurons.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Moksha.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Monomyth.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Mysticism.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Near-death_experience.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Non-ego.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Panic_attack.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Panic_attacks.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Posttraumatic_stress_disorder.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Psychosis.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Religious_experience.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Spiritual_crisis.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Spiritualism.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLink Spirituality.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mystical psychosis".
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageWikiLinkText "mystical psychosis".
- Mystical_psychosis hasPhotoCollection Mystical_psychosis.
- Mystical_psychosis wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Mystical_psychosis subject Category:Mysticism.
- Mystical_psychosis subject Category:Psychosis.
- Mystical_psychosis hypernym Term.
- Mystical_psychosis comment "Mystical psychosis is a term coined by Arthur J. Deikman in the early 1970s to characterize first-person accounts of psychotic experiences that are strikingly similar to reports of mystical experiences. According to Deikman, and authors from a number of disciplines, psychotic experience need not be considered pathological, especially if consideration is given to the values and beliefs of the individual concerned.".
- Mystical_psychosis label "Mystical psychosis".
- Mystical_psychosis sameAs m.05q4gw5.
- Mystical_psychosis sameAs Мистический_психоз.
- Mystical_psychosis sameAs Q4296524.
- Mystical_psychosis sameAs Q4296524.
- Mystical_psychosis wasDerivedFrom Mystical_psychosis?oldid=673562902.
- Mystical_psychosis isPrimaryTopicOf Mystical_psychosis.