PDA

View Full Version : God Spot


Daniel
08-30-2006, 10:04 PM
There was an interesting article that I read some time ago about research in the 'mapping' of the brain and how it's function relates to the religious experiences. At that time, there was some thinking that there was a 'God Spot', an area of the brain, that when stimulated, would elicit numinous experiences. Well, they've done a bit more research and have come up with this:


http://www.livescience.com/humanbiology/060829_god_spot.html

No 'God Spot' in the Human Brain

By Ker Than
LiveScience Staff Writer
posted: 29 August 2006
01:43 pm ET

The human brain does not contain a single "God spot" responsible for mystical and religious experiences, a new study finds.

Instead, the sense of union with God or something greater than the self often described by those who have undergone such experiences involves the recruitment and activation of a variety brain regions normally implicated in different functions such as self-consciousness, emotion and body representation.

The finding, detailed in the current issue of Neuroscience Letters, contradicts previous suggestions by other researchers that the there might be a specific region in the brain designed for communication with God.

What it means

"The main goal of the study was to identify the neural correlates of a mystical experience," said study leader Mario Beauregard of the University of Montreal in Canada. "This does not diminish the meaning and value of such an experience, and neither does it confirm or disconfirm the existence of God."

In the study, 15 cloistered Carmelite nuns, ranging in age from 23 to 64, had their brains scanned while asked to relive the most intense mystical experience they had ever had as members of the religious order.

The nuns were not asked to try and actually achieve a state of spiritual union with God during the experiment because, as the nuns put it, "God cannot be summoned at will."

Joy and love

Nevertheless, the researchers believe their method was justified because previous studies have shown that actors asked to enter a particular state activated the same brain regions as people actually experiencing those emotions.

As a control, the nuns were instructed to relive the most intense state of union with another human ever felt in their lives while in the Carmelite order.

The study found that mystical experiences activate more than a dozen different areas of the brain at once. One of the regions, called the caudate nucleus, has been implicated in positive emotions such as happiness, romantic love and maternal love.

The researchers speculate that activation of this brain region during mystical experiences is related to the feelings of joy and unconditional love the nuns described.

Interesting, yes?

I'd like to see them hook up a person when they are HAVING a full blown mystical experience, not just remembering it. That might show something too.

Emproph
09-02-2006, 05:02 AM
The nuns were not asked to try and actually achieve a state of spiritual union with God during the experiment because, as the nuns put it, "God cannot be summoned at will."
I think it’s possible to allow one’s self to be “summoned” by God at will, assuming one’s “will” is not impeded by physical duress and that the “summoning” process is understood to be an always affair, as the presence of God is ever-present. Thus the summoning process would essentially be no more than the conscious and "willful" recognition of the ever presence of God, in the mystical sense of course.

...Anyway,
Interesting, yes?

I'd like to see them hook up a person when they are HAVING a full blown mystical experience, not just remembering it. That might show something too.They have done that at least with one woman who purports to speak with the Virgin Mary. They hooked her up and measured her brain waves WHILE she was talking with the Virgin Mary and found that her brain was emitting theta waves (delta waves?), whichever they were, she was obviously wide-awake and these are brain waves that are thought to be possible only when one is in deep deep sleep.

Speaking from personal mystical experience, it seems to me that it’s about the integration and cohesive communication between all your brain parts, when they reach a certain intensity they open or “activate” the “God spot,” for lack of a mystical way of describing it.

For me it seems that the “God-spot” is contingent upon all the other brain spots working in (God-spot) harmony. “The sum is greater than the whole” adage comes to mind.

There may not be a particular spot, but the thing we are looking for may lie in the way our brains function when it comes to the integration of thought, especially when it comes to thoughts related to the integration of harmony.