trance

psychology

Learn about this topic in these articles:

major reference

  • The Ecstasy of St. Teresa
    In mysticism: Trance

    Mystical experiences can be categorized not only according to their contents but also according to the alternate states of consciousness during which they occur. For example, St. Teresa of Ávila distinguished four stages of mystical prayer. In “the prayer of simplicity,” a prayer that…

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African religions

  • Gun, the Fon god of iron and war, iron; in the Musée de l'Homme, Paris. Height 165 cm.
    In African religions: Ritual and religious specialists

    Possession trance is the most dramatic and intimate contact that occurs between devotee and divinity. In most cases possession is actively sought, induced through the ritual preparation of the participant. Techniques that facilitate this altered state of consciousness range from inhaling vapours of medicinal preparations to…

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divination

  • In divination: Intuitive divination

    As a mantic art, trance is associated with oracular utterance and spirit possession. An impressive performance will be taken to represent the actual voice of a god or spirit addressing the client directly; and divination in this mode is known from diverse religious traditions, including Christianity. The idea that…

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dreams

hallucinations

  • Honoré Daumier: caricature
    In hallucination: Hypnosis and trance states

    The mystic achieves hallucinations by gaining control of his own dissociative mechanisms; perhaps this is a form of self-hypnosis. Such individuals can accomplish an astonishing withdrawal from the environment by prolonged intense concentration (e.g., by gazing at some object). The hallucinations may be…

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shamanistic ritual

  • Mongol shaman
    In Central Asian arts: Performing arts: dance and theatre

    …shaman to induce the ecstatic trance during which he symbolically journeys to the heavens or to the netherworld when playing the role of a psychopomp, or conductor of souls. Performances of the Buddhist monastic dance, known as ’cham, and the Buddhist morality plays, called a-che-lha-mo (“older sister goddess”), were accompanied…

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