But it's an existential experience which presumably is operating on a level that demands asking or having in mind a particular suite of questions
Haven't a clue - I'm not somebody who has this experience.
Oh OH, A phrase used often by philosophical empiricists.
This obsession of yours just makes you look silly.
But that depends on what questions we are asking
Duh!
'' I don't feel frightened by not knowing things '' I don't believe it from a guy involved in the pursuit of science his whole life. Pious unbelieveable bollocks.
I identify with it perfectly. It's telling that you insist that the experiences you think help you must be universal, whereas as soon as anybody expresses a different experience, it's "unbelievable". That's the thing with many subjective experiences, they aren't universal and people see things differently.
It is uncommon in those ''not going there.'' But it is still common to both religion and atheism.
As I said, it's perhaps the case that
some atheists have some sort of experience they might describe in those terms, but claiming it as universal would be just as silly as me claiming Feynman's experience was universal because I share it with him.
Our experiences are not really a matter of choice, so "not going there" is meaningless because it implies that everybody experiences it but some of us are ignoring or avoiding it. This simply isn't the case.