J Korean Neuropsychiatr Assoc.  2000 Jul;39(4):691-697.

The Relationship between Mystic Experience and Dissociation

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Psychiatry, College of Medicine, Yonsei University, Seoul.

Abstract

Mystic experience is highly evaluated so as to be called as core of experience in the religious world and also becomes the subject of concern among various social groups. Psychologists and psychiatrists are concerned about it, but because of its individuality and subjectivity, the scientific approach was difficult so that only the description of mystic experience has been researched so far. There is a current report saying that mystic experience is the one of the dissociative phenomenon. And there are a lot of reports saying that dissociation is related to childhood trauma experience and rises as much as psychopathological tendencies exist. Consequently, based on the reference that mystic experience is connected with dissociation, the study has been progressed to find out the level of dissociation, psychopathology and trauma experience for religious people who experienced mystic experience but excluding patients. Among them, it has been compared between group of non-mystic experience (n=35) and group of mystic experience (n=42). We used Dissociative Experience scale-Korean version (DES-K), Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R), questionnaire about trauma. The result is that the group of mystic experience had a significantly higher tendency to have dissociation and trauma experience than group of non-mystic experience. However, the difference of psychopathology has not been found.

Keyword

Mystic experience; Dissociation; Psychopathology; Trauma

MeSH Terms

Humans
Individuality
Psychiatry
Psychology
Psychopathology
Surveys and Questionnaires
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