A Jamesian Framework for Clinical Work
with Non-Ordinary States of Consciousness:
From Radical Empiricism to Therapeutic Pluralism
ABSTRACT:
This theoretical paper proposes a Jamesian framework for clinically informed work with non-ordinary states of consciousness (NOSC) and develops three practical contributions. (1) It reinterprets William James’s “religious experiences” through radical empiricism as a disciplined method of describing lived meaning, value, affect, and relations as data, while bracketing metaphysical claims; on this basis, it builds a terminological bridge to the holotropic framework as a heuristic comparison explicitly limited by anachronism. (2) It uses James’s pragmatism to operationalize “cash value” over time through longitudinal follow-up (e.g., during the first and second week, after several months, and after one year) and indicators of regulation, functioning, relationships, risk markers, narrative stability, and embodiment of insights into small, repeatable actions. (3) Building on James’s shift from monism to pluralism, the paper formulates a stance of therapeutic pluralism and a clinical compass grounded in safety and pragmatic outcomes. The framework is applied to cases between NOSC-oriented therapeutic work, spiritual crisis, and acute psychosis, arguing for an ethics of neither reductionism nor romanticization; brief vignettes illustrate differing priorities for stabilization versus meaning-making.
DISCLOSURE: The content of this article has been previously published in Kairos – Slovenian Journal of Psychotherapy (Slovene language).
KEYWORDS: William James, non-ordinary states of consciousness, radical empiricism, pragmatis, therapeutic pluralism, spiritual crisis, acute psychosis.
It’s part Integral Transpersonal Journal n. 24
