
The following article is from Free Inquiry magazine, Volume 21, Number 4.
Critics accuse secular humanists of reductionism, of assuming too hastily that mundane physical explanations explain away the need for mystery. Yet a sufficiently powerful explanation will explain some mysteries away. For example, once one truly understands the idea of living on a rotating planet, ancient notions of the sun circling the Earth lose all force despite our naïve experience of its east-to-west procession through the sky. A firm grasp of evolutionary theory dispels the need to posit a cosmic designer. Today, brain research is providing mundane explanations for phenomena that many relied on to demonstrate the existence of the supernatural.
Religious experience or mystical experience is an altered state of consciousness in which ones perceived relationship to the world shifts profoundly. One may feel oceanic oneness with the universe, or an eerie sense of encountering some exalted Other. Like out-of-body experiences and near-death experiences, mystical experience is valid in the very limited sense that some people genuinely have the experience. But its subjectivea trick the brain plays on us, not an experience of anything real in the world.
New technologies that image blood flow and electrical activity in the conscious brain show how the trick is played. Recent studies reveal the mechanics of religious experience so fully that little room for mystery remains. University of Pennsylvania neurologist Andrew B. Newberg imaged the brains of meditating Tibetan Buddhist adepts. He found more activity in the frontal lobe, associated with concentration, and less in the parietal lobe that is thought to generate our sense of the bodys orientation in space. Result: an intensely real sensation of passing outside the physical worldand a powerful, purely physical explanation for the sensation of oneness with the cosmos. What about encounter experiences? Michael Persinger, a Laurentian University neuroscientist, fits volunteers with a helmet that swirls weak electromagnetic fields into their temporal lobes. About 80 percent clearly experience a numinous Other; most interpret it in religious terms. Persinger draws the conclusion any atheist would: Religion is a property of the brain, only the brain, and has little to do with whats out there.
Others disagree, Newberg for one. His book triggered a spring flood of media attention, including a Newsweek cover story. To Newberg, the fact that religious experience has specific brain mechanisms is actually a sign that God exists: humans are hard-wired for religion because God gave us this avenue by which to experience him. University of Kansas psychologist Daniel Batson agrees. He scoffs at reductionism: To say the brain produces religion is like saying a piano produces music.
Such arguments share an underlying desperation. The faithful yearn to cling to God, or spirituality, or the oneness of being while accommodating scientific findings that scour the foundations out from under those beliefs. As Christian philosopher Nancey Murphy admitted to the Washington Post, brain research into religious experience reinforces atheistic assumptions and makes religion appear useless. If you can explain religious experience purely as a brain phenomenon, you dont need the assumption of the existence of God. Hear, hear.
Religious experience hasnt merely been explained. Its on the threshold of being explained away, if that hasnt already occurreda development secular humanists should welcome. Believers will go on spinning rationalizations, trying to reconcile ancient mystical ideas with research findings that make them unnecessary. Theyll probably generate a few more best-sellers along the way. But I cant help thinking that on some level, the Andrew Newbergs of the world already know theyve lost.
1. Sharon Begley, God and the Brain: How Were Wired for Spirituality. Newsweek, May 7, 2001. See also In Search of God, New Scientist, April 21, 2001; Laurie Barclay, Is God a State of Mind? WebMD Medical News, April 11, 2001.
2. Shankar Vedantam, Tracing the Synapses of Our Spirituality. Washington Post, June 17, 2001.
Tom Flynn is Editor of Free Inquiry.
CFI SUMMIT
OCTOBER 24-27 2013
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