Psychosis or Spiritual Experience? Rethinking Mental States Through Cultural and Mystical Lenses
PDF

Keywords

Mental Health
Schizophrenia
Psychosis
Mediumship
Spirituality
Shamanism
Nutritional Psychiatry

How to Cite

El Chakieh, S. (2025). Psychosis or Spiritual Experience? Rethinking Mental States Through Cultural and Mystical Lenses. Journal of Scientific Exploration, 39(3), 356–364. https://doi.org/10.31275/20253827

Abstract

Psychotic processes remain poorly understood mental states. This review aims to examine the spiritual challenges and discrepancies surrounding psychosis, and the role cultural backgrounds and beliefs play in determining whether a psychotic episode is considered a pathological condition. The article explores mediumship, shamanism, and mystical experiences, examining their similarities and differences with psychosis. Symptoms of psychotic episodes are often viewed as pathological rather than simply different or less understood. The spiritual world remains a controversial topic in the scientific community. However, an openness in exploring this realm may help provide meaning and guidance to patients with psychosis. Mediumship, shamanism, and mystical experiences all involve altered states of consciousness and perceived interactions with spiritual realms; however, they differ in their conceptual foundations, cultural contexts, and functions. It is important to recognize that attributing spiritual meaning to a psychotic episode does not automatically rule out the possibility of an underlying pathology. Factors such as nutritional deficiencies or biochemical imbalances should be carefully considered before assigning spiritual significance to a symptom. This article aims to explore the complex interplay between these phenomena and psychosis, highlighting how their overlaps can complicate diagnosis and make treatment even more challenging. Further research on the subject could help to establish links between tangible and intangible aspects of life and bring to light new alternative approaches to address psychosis. 

https://doi.org/10.31275/20253827
PDF
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

Copyright (c) 2025 both author and journal hold copyright