By sister initiate
Pamela Millar, San Jose, California, USA (Originally in English)
Quan
Yin practitioners and many religious individuals are not alien to wonderful
experiences such as “entering samadhi,” or being “one with Heaven” and
“one with all of Creation.” However, such phenomena related to religions
and spiritual practice remain inexplicable myths to scientists. Nonetheless,
in recent years, more and more scientists are seeking to find the truth
underlying such experiences by utilizing many advanced technological
devices.
These researchers have finally decided that religion
merits serious study after all. In a new field called “neurotheology,”
serious scientific studies are tracing the physical changes that occur
in the brain during religious and spiritual experiences. The May 7,
2001 issue of Newsweek covered this fascinating new topic in an article
entitled “Religion and the Brain.” The author, Kenneth L. Woodward,
cited numerous books and controlled studies by medical researchers offering
evidence of how spiritual and religious inspiration produces specific
neurological reactions in the brain.
These “neurotheologists” are attempting to use the data
they gather to show that the brain is wired for spirituality, and to
determine what differentiates people who have deep spiritual experiences
from those who have little or no spiritual inclination at all. Their
research is attempting to determine what mystical experience can tell
us about consciousness overall, and whether there is a specific physical
or mental propensity that leads some individuals to a more spiritually
inspired existence.
The Newsweek article cited many examples of studies
yielding similar results, including experiments with groups of Tibetan
Buddhists, Franciscan nuns and a woman who had an epiphany at Machu
Picchu in Peru. Researcher David Wulff, who is cited in the article,
says that the consistency of “spiritual experiences across cultures,
across time and across faiths suggests a common core that is likely
a reflection of structures and processes in the human brain.”
Specifically, through spectral imaging techniques, researchers
have been able to demonstrate repeatable experiments showing common
activity in certain regions of the brain during various types of religious
experience. For example, the frontal lobe is active during times of
intense meditative concentration, the middle temporal lobe is linked
to emotional aspects of experience (such as joy and awe), the lower
temporal lobe interprets images such as crosses or statues, the juncture
of these three lobes is where response to language is governed and associations
are formed, and when the parietal lobes are completely quieted, a person
can feel at one with the universe.
The latter finding is of special interest to scientists.
There is a region in the parietal lobe toward the top and back of the
brain called the “orientation association area” that seems to go completely
dark when subjects experience their deepest sense of unity with the
universe. This part of the brain seems to govern the sense of self in
time and space. Specifically, the left orientation area governs the
notion of a physically delimited body, and the right association area
creates a sense of physical space where the body exists. One neurotheological
researcher, Andrew Newberg, in his book “Why God Won’t Go Away,” describes
the effect as follows: If you block this region, as you do during the
intense concentration of meditation, you prevent the brain from distinguishing
between self and not-self.” This could lead, then, to the impression
of being ONE with the universe.
Another theory holds that heightened electrical activity
in the temporal lobes may induce mystical experience and produce visions.
This view even suggests that the great spiritual inspiration reached
by historical figures such as Joan of Arc, Dostoyevsky, Proust, Saint
Paul and Saint Teresa of Avila simply may have been caused by “temporal
lobe epilepsy,” which consists of abnormal surges of electrical activity
in the brain’s temporal regions. As this is the area that governs language
and association, the theory is that mini electrical storms can cause
a heightened experience of visions and interpretative images, such as
visions of God. The left lobe is supposed to govern the sense of self.
If the right lobe is completely quieted, while the left lobe is stimulated,
the brain interprets a limitless sense of self, or union with God. This
is how the “voices” heard by Joan of Arc and the visions of Saint Paul
can be explained.
While all of this may seem like reductionist science
attempting to provide rational explanations for phenomena it does not
understand, there is acknowledgement by some that neural activity alone
is not proof of these experiences being “imagined” by the brain. Newberg
admits that “there is no way to determine whether the neurological changes
associated with spiritual experience mean that the brain is causing
those experiences…or is instead perceiving a spiritual reality”. What
these types of studies may do, however, is open science to a greater
way of understanding the nature of human consciousness, one of the greatest
mysteries of life. This bridging between the fields of science and religion
may well lead to new breakthroughs in human understanding.
For
more details, please refer to the following URL: http://www.passig.com/pic/Religion&TheBrain.htm
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