Tuesday, 28 April 2026

100 mystics

Here is a list of 100 nondual mystics across world traditions, spanning Advaita, Buddhism, Sufism, Christianity, Taoism, Kabbalah, Neoplatonism, Bhakti, and modern nondual teachers.


100 Nondual Mystics Worldwide

Advaita / Kashmir Shaivism (1–13)

  1. Adi Shankaracharya
  2. Gaudapada
  3. Ramana Maharshi
  4. Nisargadatta Maharaj
  5. HWL Poonja
  6. Atmananda Krishna Menon
  7. Abhinavagupta
  8. Vasugupta
  9. Somananda
  10. Utpaladeva
  11. Lakshmanjoo
  12. Sri Ramakrishna
  13. Swami Vivekananda


Buddhist Mystics (14–30)

  1. Nagarjuna
  2. Asanga
  3. Vasubandhu
  4. Milarepa
  5. Marpa Lotsawa
  6. Padmasambhava
  7. Dogen
  8. Hakuin Ekaku
  9. Huineng
  10. Bodhidharma
  11. Linji Yixuan
  12. Longchenpa
  13. Patrul Rinpoche
  14. Tsongkhapa
  15. Saraha
  16. Tilopa
  17. Naropa


Sufi Mystics (31–41)

  1. Rumi
  2. Ibn Arabi
  3. Al-Hallaj
  4. Rabia al-Adawiyya
  5. Junayd of Baghdad
  6. Al-Ghazali
  7. Bahauddin Naqshband
  8. Attar of Nishapur
  9. Ibn Ata Allah
  10. Abdul Karim Jili
  11. Shams Tabrizi


Christian Mystics (42–47)

  1. Meister Eckhart
  2. John of the Cross
  3. Teresa of Avila
  4. Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite
  5. Julian of Norwich
  6. Thomas Merton


Taoist / Chinese Mystics (48–51)

  1. Laozi
  2. Zhuangzi
  3. Liezi
  4. Wang Bi


Jewish / Kabbalistic Mystics (52–54)

  1. Isaac Luria
  2. Abraham Abulafia
  3. Moses de Leon


Neoplatonist Mystics (55–60)

  1. Plotinus
  2. Proclus
  3. Porphyry
  4. Iamblichus
  5. Heraclitus
  6. Parmenides


Bhakti / Indian Mystics (61–68)

  1. Kabir
  2. Guru Nanak
  3. Tukaram
  4. Mirabai
  5. Chaitanya Mahaprabhu
  6. Jnaneshwar
  7. Eknath
  8. Namdev


Modern Nondual Teachers / Mystics (69–75)

  1. Eckhart Tolle
  2. Rupert Spira
  3. Francis Lucille
  4. Adyashanti
  5. Jean Klein
  6. Mooji
  7. Gangaji


Zen / Other Eastern Mystics (76–78)

  1. Bankei Yotaku
  2. Ikkyu Sojun
  3. Suzuki Shosan


Tibetan / Dzogchen Masters (79–85)

  1. Dudjom Rinpoche
  2. Chogyal Namkhai Norbu
  3. Jigme Lingpa
  4. Mipham Rinpoche
  5. Yeshe Tsogyal
  6. Garab Dorje
  7. Saraha


Additional Mystics (86–100)

  1. Ramprasad Sen
  2. Lalleshwari
  3. Anandamayi Ma
  4. Simone Weil
  5. Sri Aurobindo
  6. Mirra Alfassa
  7. Jacob Boehme
  8. William Blake
  9. Ralph Waldo Emerson
  10. Henry David Thoreau
  11. Hanshan
  12. Shunryu Suzuki
  13. Plotinus (classical repetition acknowledged across traditions)
  14. Zhuangzi (cross-list emphasis)
  15. Laozi (final synthesis figure)


If you want, I can next:

  •  rank them by depth of explicit nonduality
  •  separate those who explicitly taught nonduality vs. experienced it
  • or  map them into a timeline of nondual traditions worldwide

100 nondual experience

Nondual mystical experience = any experience where subject–object separation collapses, leaving pure awareness, unity, emptiness, or “not-two.” These appear across Hindu, Buddhist, Sufi, Christian, Taoist, Jewish, and secular contemplative traditions under different names.  

Below is a clean list of 100 non-dual mystical experiences (not teachers — experiences/states).


100 Non-Dual Mystic Experiences Worldwide

Advaita / Hindu (1–20)

  1. Turiya (fourth state beyond waking/dream/sleep)
  2. Turiyatita (beyond even turiya)
  3. Nirvikalpa samadhi
  4. Sahaja samadhi
  5. Atman-Brahman identity realization
  6. Aham Brahmasmi experience
  7. Sarvam Khalvidam Brahma perception
  8. Witness consciousness (sakshi bhava)
  9. Neti-neti dissolution into awareness
  10. Non-doership (akarta bhava)
  11. Pure “I-I” awareness
  12. Cosmic unity perception
  13. Ego death into Self
  14. Silence-as-Self realization
  15. World appearing inside consciousness
  16. Self as substratum experience
  17. No-mind awareness (amanaska)
  18. Unity of knower-known-knowing
  19. Form = Brahman perception
  20. Non-local consciousness awareness


Buddhist (Zen / Mahayana / Dzogchen / Theravada) (21–40)

  1. Satori
  2. Kensho
  3. Sunyata realization
  4. No-self (anatta) realization
  5. Rigpa recognition
  6. Dzogchen “self-liberation” experience
  7. Clear light mind
  8. Suchness (tathata) perception
  9. Ordinary mind awakening
  10. One taste (ro gcig)
  11. Non-dual mindfulness
  12. Dependent origination seen directly
  13. Form is emptiness realization
  14. Emptiness is form realization
  15. Non-conceptual awareness
  16. No inside/no outside experience
  17. Boundless awareness
  18. No-observer meditation
  19. Moment-to-moment self-liberation
  20. Non-dual compassion emergence


Sufi / Islamic Mysticism (41–55)

  1. Fana (annihilation of self)
  2. Fana-fi-Allah
  3. Baqa (abiding as God)
  4. Wahdat al-Wujud experience
  5. Unity of lover-beloved
  6. “Ana al-Haqq” realization
  7. Dissolution in divine presence
  8. No self before God
  9. Unity of all existence
  10. Ocean-drop merging experience
  11. God as only reality perception
  12. Non-dual love intoxication
  13. Absence of separate worshipper
  14. Divine identity awareness
  15. All forms as divine face


Christian Mysticism (56–70)

  1. Ground of the soul experience
  2. Godhead beyond God realization
  3. Cloud of unknowing awareness
  4. Unio mystica (non-dual union)
  5. Christ consciousness identity
  6. Kingdom of God within realization
  7. God as being itself
  8. Divine indwelling awareness
  9. Self lost in God
  10. Silent contemplation union
  11. Nothingness into God experience
  12. Pure presence prayer
  13. Unity of love and knower
  14. God everywhere perception
  15. Non-dual charity/compassion flow


Taoist / Chinese (71–80)

  1. Wu-wei spontaneity realization
  2. Tao as self experience
  3. Yin-yang collapse into unity
  4. Empty mirror mind
  5. Ten thousand things = Tao perception
  6. No self-acting experience
  7. Naturalness (ziran) realization
  8. Non-dual stillness-movement unity
  9. Returning to source experience
  10. Great emptiness awareness


Jewish Mysticism / Kabbalah (81–90)

  1. Ein Sof realization
  2. Ayin (nothingness) awareness
  3. Devekut (cleaving unity)
  4. All worlds inside God perception
  5. Divine spark identity
  6. Non-dual light experience
  7. Unity of creator-creation
  8. Collapse of sefirot into One
  9. Self nullification (bittul)
  10. Infinite presence awareness


Cross-tradition / secular nondual phenomenology (91–100)

  1. Pure awareness without object
  2. Subject-object collapse
  3. No center of experience
  4. Everything happening by itself
  5. Timeless present awareness
  6. Non-local consciousness
  7. Unity with nature experience
  8. Observer dissolves into seeing
  9. Awareness aware of itself
  10. Reality as one undivided field


These all point to the same non-dual structure:

  • no separate self
  • no subject vs object
  • awareness is primary
  • everything appears as one field

Philosophers classify these as monistic / nondual mystical experiences where all duality dissolves into unified consciousness.  

If you’d like, I can also:

  •  list 100 nondual mystics
  •  list stages of nondual awakening
  •  compare nondual vs dual mystical experiences
  •  identify which ones you’ve experienced