Perhaps you mean "dogma" seized control? "Mysticism" is something else, philosophically speaking.
I think I meant mysticism. However, now that you mention it, I might include dogma as well. Of course, dogmatic mysticism is the best of all possible worlds.
Limbo said:
Mysticism is the pursuit of achieving communion, identity with, or conscious awareness of ultimate reality, divinity, spiritual truth, or God through direct experience, intuition, or insight.

Why don't we try to establish the veracity of the experiences, if in fact they actually occur, before we start making a pursuit of them...
We must do two things here, if we wish to proceed with the "pursuit."
(1) Establish that the experiences referred to do, in fact, occur, and
(2) Establish that these experiences have anything to do with anything "mystical."
Limbo said:
And it's these insights which lead to philosophies being developed. Philosophy is born from mystical experience. That's why so many of our greatest philosophers have been mystics or sympathetic to mysticism...
Philosophy is born of mystical experience? That's quite the claim. Care to back that up? If philosophy is born of mystical experience, why are you hedging by saying "so many of our greatest philosophers" instead of saying "all of our philosophers" here?
Some, even many, philosophies may have been born of mysticism, but some have been born of deciding that candle light stories are just that - candle light stories.
Now "greatest" is an evaluative term. Care to define for us what it is that makes a given philosopher "great" as you use it here? Perhaps your use of the word "greatest" here is an affirming of the consequent? Perhaps you are stipulating that "greatness" is a function of being mystically-oriented?
Limbo said:
Note the difference between mysticism in a philosophical sense and in mysticism in a new-age/religious/pop-culture sense:
The difference as depicted in this writing:
"A (purportedly) super sense-perceptual or sub sense-perceptual experience granting acquaintance of realities or states of affairs that are of a kind not accessible by way of sense perception, somatosensory modalities, or standard introspection.
A (purportedly) super sense-perceptual or sub sense-perceptual unitive experience granting acquaintance of realities or states of affairs that are of a kind not accessible by way of sense-perception, somatosensory modalities, or standard introspection."
As far as I can tell, the only difference I can see between these two stipulations is the word "unitive" (a descriptor applied to the word "experience"), both of which rely on the veracity of non sense-experience - a veracity far from established, perhaps far from establishable.
So, with these broad and narrow senses of the word in mind, I find myself with one question: "And your point is..?"
Or were you referring to something else with "new-age/religious/pop-culture sense" above? If so, precisely to what do you refer? And why do you assume I am not referring to the philosophical sense of the term "mysticism?"
Limbo said:
Thanks for the link. I found it ... entertaining.
It might serve one well to read some of the critiques provided in the article itself about the veracity of perceptions of mystical properties, qualities or states. When it comes down to it, much of skepticism traditionally has its basis in the unreliability of individual experience and the epistemic barrier between the
purported "knower and the
[purportedly] known." Many, if not most, of the tropes, revolve around this central theme. A theme, I find reinforced every time I look above the rim of my glasses (it would seem foolish of me to assume that the whole world changes because I am looking through plastic at one moment and not looking through plastic the next.
The word "purported," and variants thereof, make a brief appearance at the beginning of the article - if one applies the word "purported" rigorously throughout the article, much of the fog clears away and the various speculations about mystical "experiences" seem to be intricate elaborations on a fiction.