
Phenomenological Account of Religious Experience
Author(s) -
Donny Gahral Adian
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
kanz philosophia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2442-5451
pISSN - 2407-1056
DOI - 10.20871/kpjipm.v1i1.4
Subject(s) - empiricism , perception , religious experience , object (grammar) , epistemology , a priori and a posteriori , psychology , rationalism , natural (archaeology) , phenomenology (philosophy) , cognitive psychology , philosophy , computer science , artificial intelligence , history , archaeology
History of philosophy is built upon rigid discrimination between various human experiences. Human experiences are divided mainly into two major experiences: Perceptual and intelectual. Perceptual experience is deined by empiricism as an aposteriori experience of empirical sensations. Meanwhile, rationalism claims that the only acceptable experience is apriori experience of intelectual object (natural laws, mathematical equations and logical operations). There is no other experience outside those two philosophical account of experiences. All other experiences must be subsumed either within perceptual or intelectual experience.