2019
DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/ux28d
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What Counts as Religious Experience? The Inventory of Nonordinary Experiences as a Tool for Analysis across Cultures

Abstract: When operationalizing ‘religiosity’ or ‘spirituality’ or ‘religious experience’ as measurable constructs, researchers tacitly treat them as if they were cross-culturally stable ‘things’ rather than investigating the way culturally-laden concepts, such as ‘religious’ or ‘spiritual,’ are used to interpret or appraise contested aspects of human life within and across cultures. To illustrate the distinction, we contrast the traditional research design that the Religious Experience Research Centre used to survey an… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…In a related review, Yaden, Haidt, Hood, Vago, and Newberg (2017) discussed “self-transcendent experiences,” which they defined as “transient mental states of decreased self-salience and/or increased feelings of connectedness” (p. 1) and located on a continuum of intensity ranging from relatively ordinary experiences of absorption to peak or mystical experiences. Our validation team (myself, Taves, Melissa Gordon Wolf, Elliott Ihm, and Maharshi Vyas) used their proposals to refine and evaluate the self-related items that the coauthors (myself, Michael Kinsella, and Michael Barlev) drew from extant measures of anomalous, religious, and pathological experiences, as well as from traditions that valorize and seek to cultivate alterations in sense of self, when constructing our Inventory of Nonordinary Experiences (INOE; in development, for an overview, see Taves and Kinsella 2019). 6…”
Section: An Expanded Framework For Studying Alterations In Sense Of Selfmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In a related review, Yaden, Haidt, Hood, Vago, and Newberg (2017) discussed “self-transcendent experiences,” which they defined as “transient mental states of decreased self-salience and/or increased feelings of connectedness” (p. 1) and located on a continuum of intensity ranging from relatively ordinary experiences of absorption to peak or mystical experiences. Our validation team (myself, Taves, Melissa Gordon Wolf, Elliott Ihm, and Maharshi Vyas) used their proposals to refine and evaluate the self-related items that the coauthors (myself, Michael Kinsella, and Michael Barlev) drew from extant measures of anomalous, religious, and pathological experiences, as well as from traditions that valorize and seek to cultivate alterations in sense of self, when constructing our Inventory of Nonordinary Experiences (INOE; in development, for an overview, see Taves and Kinsella 2019). 6…”
Section: An Expanded Framework For Studying Alterations In Sense Of Selfmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many were extracted from existing measures, consolidated as appropriate and revised to eliminate appraisals; others were based on our own and others knowledge of specific traditions and cultures. We pilot-tested the concept with English-speaking participants on Amazon’s Mechanical Turk in the United States ( n = 843) and India ( n = 721); (Barlev, 2019; Taves, Barlev, & Kinsella, 2017). The validation team has since translated the Inventory into Hindi and is now in the process of validating it at the item level in order to (a) ensure that the items are understood as we intend and (b) assess whether items can be translated and understood in roughly the same way in both contexts (see Taves & Kinsella, 2019; Vyas, 2019; Wolf & Ihm, 2019).…”
Section: An Expanded Framework For Studying Alterations In Sense Of Selfmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of special interest is the development of the Inventory of Non-Ordinary Experiences (INOE) that helps researchers distinguish between the extraordinary experiences that people report (e.g., “I have had an experience of unity”) and the interpretation or attribution that people make about this experience (“I think this experience was caused by some supernatural power” vs “I think this experience was caused by some brain chemical alterations”; cf. ref ). Next to these standardized scales, qualitative research methods are particularly helpful to study, understand, and analyze these experiences, using a wealth of research techniques such as in-depth interviews, participant observation, and innovative methodologies such as microphenomenology, which all help explore participants’ lived experience in fine detail .…”
Section: Scientific Tools To Study Mysticismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many scholars acknowledge the difficulty in defining both concepts (Bender 2010;Hill et al 2000;Streib and Hood 2016;Zinnbauer et al 1997;Zinnbauer, Pargament, and Scott 1999). 1 A complete inventory of definitions is beyond the scope of this article, but here we treat both religion and spirituality as socially and historically situated boundary objects used to describe behaviors that "invoke direct or indirect (institutionalized) connection to something that is 'other than' everyday reality" (Ammerman 2020:9;Taves et al 2019). 2 In this focus on transcending ordinary experience, both religion and spirituality share a relationship with the sacred (Zinnbauer and Pargament 2005).…”
Section: Spirituality As a Boundary Objectmentioning
confidence: 99%