Intellectual visions: a comparison of aphantasia and mystical experience
Intellectual visions: a comparison of aphantasia and mystical experience When I read Theresa of Avila's Interior Castle, one thing that struck me was her description of what she called "intellectual visions". This refers to the experience of pure conceptual knowing without words or images. Teresa began to have such experiences while practicing a form of meditation called contemplative prayer. In her words: We see nothing, either interiorly or exteriorly. . . But without seeing anything the soul conceives the object and feels whence it is more clearly than if it saw it, save that nothing in particular is shown to it. It is like feeling someone near one in a dark place" (first letter to Father Rodrigo Alvarez). This mode of cognition was so unfamiliar to her that, at first, she found it confusing and even frightening. She was unable to produce such experiences voluntarily and believed that they could be obtained only through supernatural infusion. When ...