Do religious
experiences come from God, or
are they merely the random
firing of neurons in the brain? Drawing on his own research with
Carmelite nuns, neuroscientist Mario Beauregard shows
that genuine, life-changing
spiritual events can be documented. He offers compelling evidence that religious
experiences have a nonmaterial origin, making a convincing case for what
many in scientific fields are loath
to consider—that it is
God who creates
our spiritual experiences,
not the brain.
Beauregard and O'Leary explore
recent attempts to locate a "God gene" in some of us
and claims that our brains
are "hardwired" for religion—even
the strange case of one
neuroscientist who allegedly invented an electromagnetic "God helmet" that could produce a mystical experience in anyone who wore
it. The authors argue that these attempts
are misguided and narrow-minded, because they reduce
spiritual experiences to
material phenomena.
Many scientists ignore hard evidence that
challenges their materialistic prejudice, clinging to the
limited view that our experiences are explainable only by material causes, in the obstinate conviction that the physical world
is the only
reality. But scientific materialism is at a loss to
explain irrefutable accounts of mind
over matter, of intuition, willpower, and leaps of
faith, of the "placebo effect" in medicine, of near-death experiences
on the operating table, and of
psychic premonitions of a loved one
in crisis, to say nothing of
the occasional sense of oneness with
nature and mystical experiences in meditation or prayer.
Traditional science explains
away these and other occurrences
as delusions or misunderstandings, but by exploring the
latest neurological research on phenomena such as these, The Spiritual Brain
gets to their
real source.