This work constitutes a treatise on comparative mysticism that, in defiance of the straitjacket of human language, explores different traditions that have tried to witness the same unspeakable trance. Through the analysis of the most varied contemplative schools (Kabbalah, Christianity, Sufism and Zen Buddhism, without forgetting agnosticism, esotericism and heterodoxy) and different inquiries into religious experience (ecstatic poetry, theology, psychoanalysis or, even, ritual dance), the authors review and update a transcendent vividness that has been maintained throughout history, rescuing from oblivion crest figures of contemplative literature. Mystical experience is a current experience that often takes place on the margin of the "regulatory" mystical pathways and strict individual sanctity. The contemplatives of all times and religious cultures are surprisingly similar: they all...read more