This paper aims to develop and explore the dynamic interrelation between religious theology, psychoanalysis, neurochemistry and psychology, through investigating the extent of the relationship between positive empathetic beliefs, serotonin (5HT), dimethyltryptamine (DMT), empathic emotional states, elevated serotonin levels, and their combined influences relating to the Jungian concept of mystical experiences and enlightened spiritual consciousness, across a cross-section of the major world religions. It examines specifically how the conversion of serotonin into the potent psychoactive compound, DMT, within the pineal gland, the hyperstimulation of multiple areas of the frontal lobes through the DMT release expands the bottleneck filter of perception which then combined with the gland’s unique photoreceptive properties, effectively enables and facilitates individual mystical experiences based on prior serotonin saturation of religious experience. It is proposed that psychological experiences of enlightenment or heightened spiritual consciousness, which may be linked to heightened perceptual awareness of all pervasive divine presence of an almighty supreme being have a neurological and psychopharmaceutical basis which is a basis for Carl Jung’s theoretical and experiential conceptualisation of spiritual awareness, psychic experiences and religious experience. This multidisciplinary approach to evidence and theory from separate domains of academia incorporates recent findings from neuroscience, psychopharmacology, cognitive psychology, and religious studies to draw together, define and explain the exact underpinning psychophysiological mechanisms are underlying the creation of mystical psychic states of consciousness.
Keywords: Jungian psychoanalysis, dimethyltryptamine release, mystical experience, pineal gland, serotonin elevation