<p>This paper offers a theoretical re-situating of extreme experiences in response to Dominik Mihalits’ (2025) multidimensional model. While acknowledging the value of Mihalits’ effort to de-pathologize extreme experiences, it is argued that many of the phenomena he seeks to conceptualize have long been addressed within earlier traditions of psychological and existential thought. Drawing on Karl Jaspers’ analysis of boundary situations and Abraham Maslow’s theory of peak and plateau experiences, the paper reconstructs the existential and developmental significance of extreme experiences beyond their descriptive classification. It is proposed that such experiences are not merely defined by intensity but involve disruptions of ordinary selfhood and openings toward value-laden modes of perception. Building on this reinterpretation, the paper introduces an embodied perspective to clarify how these transformations are lived. By focusing on the dynamics of the lived body and body schema, extreme experiences are conceptualized as embodied threshold phenomena in which habitual patterns of perception, action, and agency are temporarily suspended and reorganized. From this perspective, Mihalits’ six dimensions can be understood as descriptive markers of deeper existential, developmental, and embodied processes rather than as a wholly novel framework. The paper concludes that extreme experiences should be approached not as marginal anomalies but as moments in which the fundamental structure of human existence becomes particularly visible.</p>

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Extreme Experience Reconsidered: Existential, Developmental, and Embodied Dimensions

  • Shogo Tanaka

摘要

This paper offers a theoretical re-situating of extreme experiences in response to Dominik Mihalits’ (2025) multidimensional model. While acknowledging the value of Mihalits’ effort to de-pathologize extreme experiences, it is argued that many of the phenomena he seeks to conceptualize have long been addressed within earlier traditions of psychological and existential thought. Drawing on Karl Jaspers’ analysis of boundary situations and Abraham Maslow’s theory of peak and plateau experiences, the paper reconstructs the existential and developmental significance of extreme experiences beyond their descriptive classification. It is proposed that such experiences are not merely defined by intensity but involve disruptions of ordinary selfhood and openings toward value-laden modes of perception. Building on this reinterpretation, the paper introduces an embodied perspective to clarify how these transformations are lived. By focusing on the dynamics of the lived body and body schema, extreme experiences are conceptualized as embodied threshold phenomena in which habitual patterns of perception, action, and agency are temporarily suspended and reorganized. From this perspective, Mihalits’ six dimensions can be understood as descriptive markers of deeper existential, developmental, and embodied processes rather than as a wholly novel framework. The paper concludes that extreme experiences should be approached not as marginal anomalies but as moments in which the fundamental structure of human existence becomes particularly visible.