There is a disproportionate focus today on philosophy and reason - trying to think your way to God. I hear people say things like, “Philosophy is the entire basis for our faith” and similar. Apologetics has replaced Christian witness. “Five non-negotiables” is the hight of faith formation today.
-Tim-
In the USA or other Western countries there was a decline, not a focus on philosophy and reason. Secular educators have all but abandoned them, along with maybe half the Catholic and Protestant educators, certainly in “Catholic” colleges. Where philosophy and reason flourish, genuine Christian mysticism flourishes too. Those who are trying to think, and pray, their way to God are the same people. Those who want to downplay dogmas and the Magisterium, and those who want to eliminate crucifixes and the Stations of the Cross, are also the same people. Ever read Thomas Aquinas? Orthodox dogma is not sufficient in itself, but a necessary complement to meditation. The reverse is also true.
With the abandonment, even attack on doctrinal orthodoxy by parts of Western Christianity, we saw a worship of Spirituality, rather than God. During the doctrinal drought from about the late 60s to roughly the 1990s when Apologetics was dead, we saw the New Age Movement and the worship of Self, and Community, with the elimination of crucifixes, and often the Blessed Sacrament. As doctrinal orthodoxy has partially resumed since the 90s, the false spiritualities have lessened. In my diocese Christian mysticism and devotion is making a comeback - at the same time as Apologetics, especially because of EWTN.
In Asia and Africa, the Catholic Church never lost doctrinal orthodoxy in the last 50 years, and, as a result, Christian mysticism flourished throughout that period. The mystic is not the opposite of the philosopher or apologist, they are often the same person, or at least, talking to one another. For every genuine St. Faustina, guided carefully by philosophically trained,highly logical confessors, there are 999 other mystics going off in weird directions, some of which lead to cults, all of which feed into spiritual pride. Is there anyone in modern times who was more philosophical, more apologetic - and - more mystical than the priest/bishop/pope/saint who supported her cause?