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Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Michael Gerson :: Townhall.com Columnist
God and Your Brain
by Michael Gerson
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WASHINGTON -- Religion has often unintentionally enabled scientific skepticism. The faithful will issue a challenge to science: Ha, you can't explain the development of life, or the moral sense, or the nearly universal persistence of religion. To which the materialist responds: Can too. It is all biology and chemistry, thus disproving your God hypothesis.

To this musty debate, Andrew Newberg, perhaps America's leading expert on the neurological basis of religion, brings a fresh perspective. His new book, "How God Changes Your Brain," co-authored with Mark Robert Waldman, summarizes several years of groundbreaking research on the biological basis of religious experience. And it offers plenty to challenge skeptics and believers alike.

Based on brain imaging studies of Franciscan nuns and Buddhist practitioners, Sikhs and Sufis -- along with everyday people new to meditation -- Newberg asserts that traditional spiritual practices such as prayer and breath control can alter the neural connections of the brain, leading to "long-lasting states of unity, peacefulness and love." He assures the mystically challenged (such as myself) that these neural networks begin to develop quickly -- a matter of weeks in meditation, not decades on a Tibetan mountaintop. And though meditation does not require a belief in God, strong religious belief amplifies its effect on the brain and enhances "social awareness and empathy while subduing destructive feelings and emotions."

Newberg argues that religious belief is often personally and socially advantageous, allowing men and women to "imagine a better future." And he does not contend, as philosophically lazy scientists sometimes do, that a biological propensity toward belief automatically disproves the existence of an object of such belief. "Neuroscience cannot tell you if God does or doesn't exist," Newberg states with appropriate humility. Neurobiology helps explain religion; it does not explain it away.

But Newberg's research offers warnings for the religious as well. Contemplating a loving God strengthens portions of our brain -- particularly the frontal lobes and the anterior cingulate -- where empathy and reason reside. Contemplating a wrathful God empowers the limbic system, which is "filled with aggression and fear." It is a sobering concept: The God we choose to love changes us into his image, whether he exists or not. Continued...

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About The Author
Michael Gerson writes a twice-weekly column for The Post on issues that include politics, global health, development, religion and foreign policy. Michael Gerson is the author of the book "Heroic Conservatism" and a contributor to Newsweek magazine.
 
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The crux of the matter
A believer has everything to win. When he gets to the 'other side,' if he indeed has the proof that his faith has been justified all along, he has gained everything. If he instead finds nothingness, as atheists claim, he has lost nothing.
An atheist by contrast, if he gets to the other side and finds that there indeed is 'something' he will by then have lost everything.

Why religion?
Is it that humans can contemplate their death and do not want death to be the end? So different groups have sought ways to deal with that by constructing a system of beliefs that offers hope for an after life. Can it be that those groups who believed in something outside themselves-or their family or clan-survived better than groups who did not have such beliefs?
Just because we cannot now prove how the universe came about and just because we cannot prove how the inorganic (not alive) became organic (alive) does not mean that we cannot know how we evolved from early beginnings into our present forms.
I have read read that people who go to church are healthier, happier and live longer-and have more children-than do non-church goers.
But Protestant church goers have just as many divorces or maybe even more than others-or so I have read. so all is not well with church goers.
Donald W. Bales
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