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(2014) Human Studies 37 (1).

William James and the religious character of the sick soul

Roger G. López

pp. 83-101

The scholarly attention lavished on William James' case study in the "Sick Soul" lecture in The Varieties of Religious Experience of a man disturbed by the vision of an epileptic patient has generally not approached this case as a religious experience. To deepen our understanding of religious experience, I show that this case study can be understood as religious using elements of the theory of religion expounded throughout James' text. I argue that it can be understood as a stage in the process of conversion James lays out. The omission of a subsequent stage highlights James' reasons for rejecting healthy-mindedness as a philosophically adequate perspective and illustrates his claim that the strivings of the conscious mind can stunt the conversion process. Drawing on other philosophical, psychological, and literary texts, I argue that the content of the vision James describes points to solitude as a source of religious disquiet.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s10746-013-9302-0

Full citation:

López, R. G. (2014). William James and the religious character of the sick soul. Human Studies 37 (1), pp. 83-101.

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