christianity
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There's a hypothesis called Bicameral Mentality which is the most serious exploration of this phenomenon as a mode of human thought, and although it's pretty controversial and essentially non-provable, IMO it's a worthwhile and thought provoking way to explore the concept of thought itself changing as social conditions change. The idea here would be that such people are tapping into a mode of consciousness which is less individualized and more metaphorical, ie instead of "talking to myself" my thoughts are "God talking to me".
If I were to take people completely at their word when they say they hear God talking to them, I would suppose that they are tapping into this mode of thought and that they are interpreting the outside voice according to their social conditioning (ie a Christian hears God, but an ancient Greek would have heard a muse) - although I'm a bit cynical so like Chana I tend to think that there are more people doing it performatively than not.
That said, I do fundamentally believe that our internal self perception is in part socially constructed and can be altered significantly on both long and short time scales - like people who "speak in tongues" or experience other forms of religious euphoria are likely experiencing a change in mental state brought on by their circumstances in that moment - so I find the idea that people are genuinely experiencing these things totally plausible.
Intrestingly in some other cultures schizophrenia often to presents as hearing religious figures speak to them and it being nice. So there is within the rage of reported possibility
I read this paper about the topic a few months back which talks about how differently people from different cultures experience hearing voices: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/tops.12158
The most interesting part to me was the quotes from the people they interviewed:
USA (San Mateo)
Accra (Ghana)
Chennai (India)
The authors conclude one of the key difference between the American, Ghanan and Indian people is the sense of individualism and private ownership over the mind:
That's fascinating. I haven't seen it covered that thoroughly