Transformative Experience and the Rationality of Intrapersonal Disagreement: An Epistemic Reappraisal of Religious Transformation in Light of Augustine’s Narrative

Document Type : Original Article

Author

Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy and Islamic Mysticism, Faculty of Religions and Islamic Educations, International University of Islamic Denominations (IUID), Tehran, Iran

Abstract
Extended abstract
Religious transformation constitutes one of the most profound expressions of human self-transcendence. It is not a mere alteration of propositional beliefs, nor simply a shift in emotional attitude or moral commitment, but a reconfiguration of the very structures through which reality is perceived, valued, and inhabited. Such transformation involves a metamorphosis of epistemic perspective: the subject who emerges from it is not epistemically continuous with the one who entered it. The distinctive feature of transformative experience lies in this dual character—its epistemic unpredictability before the event and its constitutive alteration of identity afterward. No agent can foresee what she will come to know, desire, or become through such a passage; the epistemic standpoint required for rational evaluation arises only after the experience has already occurred. Hence, the decision to embrace or resist transformation inaugurates a paradox of rational agency: a choice that must be made in the absence of the very knowledge by which it could be justified.
Within the domain of religion, this paradox acquires an existential depth. Conversion, de-conversion, or any radical shift of faith confronts a person with an earlier self whose worldview, affective orientation, and sense of reality have been left behind, yet remain intelligible. The ensuing tension—disagreement with one’s former self—poses a distinctive epistemic problem. Two epistemic agents, the “old self” and the “new self,” occupy incompatible doxastic positions, each considering the other mistaken. The question that arises is not only which of the two is right, but how rational appraisal is even possible when the very criteria of evaluation have themselves been transformed. Treating this intrapersonal conflict as a genuine case of disagreement reveals that epistemic humility, rather than certainty, becomes the hallmark of rational integrity.
In such situations, independence of judgment must extend inward. Rationality requires the transformed self to resist uncritical confidence in its new standpoint, to acknowledge the epistemic standing of its former convictions, and to seek a mode of dialogue that honors both voices within. The possibility of this internal dialogue depends on whether meaning and justification can be sustained without collapsing into subjectivism. If, as Wittgenstein insists, language and understanding are irreducibly social, then an inner conversation is not a private soliloquy detached from shared norms but rather an internalized form of public reasoning. The self that argues with itself reenacts, within the boundaries of consciousness, the dialogical structures of communal discourse. Genuine intrapersonal dialogue, therefore, presupposes the agent’s capacity to inhabit both perspectives under the discipline of shared rational standards.
The Augustinian narrative provides a paradigmatic instance of such an internal dialogue. In Confessions, Augustine does not merely recount a psychological crisis but stages a philosophical drama between his divided selves: the restless seeker and the repentant believer. Through an empathetic reconstruction of his past, rational engagement with his former reasoning, and a normative reorientation of will and intellect toward the good, Augustine exemplifies the possibility of reconciling cognitive transformation with rational accountability. His confession is simultaneously an act of self-interpretation and epistemic justification—a demonstration that conversion need not signify the abdication of reason but rather its transfiguration through love and understanding.
The integration of will and intellect in this process reveals that rationality is not exhausted by inference or evidence; it includes the virtues of courage, integrity, and openness to truth. The decision to embark on the transformative path, though made under epistemic uncertainty, can manifest an intellectual virtue—a form of epistemic courage that participates in the moral structure of reason itself. Such a conception of rationality dissolves the opposition between faith and reason: faith becomes the will’s participation in truth under conditions of incomplete knowledge.
Disagreement with the former self, viewed in this light, ceases to be a sign of irrationality or inconsistency. Rather, it represents a moment of reflective distance in which reason confronts its own historicity and growth. The self is not a fixed locus of belief but an ongoing narrative in which different epistemic perspectives contend, converse, and are ultimately integrated. To be rational, then, is not to remain unchanged but to learn how to live intelligibly through change—to transform without disowning one’s past and to preserve continuity within conversion. Religious transformation, understood in this way, reveals the dynamic unity of knowledge, will, and selfhood: an epistemology not of detachment but of participation, in which rationality itself becomes a mode of faithfulness to the unfolding truth of the human soul.

Keywords


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