RT Article T1 'Nobody has ever seen God': the denial of the possibility of mystical experiences in eighth- and eleventh-century Byzantium JF Journal for late antique religion and culture VO 11 SP 65 OP 73 A1 Krausmüller, Dirk 1962- LA English YR 2017 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1586033271 AB In scholarly treatments of Byzantine mysticism the eighth, ninth and tenth centuries are given short shrift. Authors deal at length with the seventh-century authors John Climacus, Maximus the Confessor and Thalassius the Libyan and then immediately proceed to a discussion of the oeuvre of Symeon the New Theologian who flourished in the late tenth and early eleventh century. There is, of course, a simple reason for this approach. In the intervening years no mystical literature was produced in Byzantium. This raises the question: how can we account for this yawning gap? Two explanations are possible: either there was no interest in mysticism, or mysticism was actively rejected. This article argues that the latter explanation is correct. It analyses texts that rule out the possibility of mystical experiences and implicitly accuse mystics of heresy. K1 Byzantine mysticism K1 John Climacus K1 Maximus the Confessor K1 Symeon the New Theologian DO 10.18573/j.2018.10453