The Biology of Awe

« Pleiades -The "Seven Sisters" | Main | Mystery of Ancient Greek Theater of Epidaurus Solved »

April 16, 2007

The Biology of Awe

Alchemist_800x600_5The awe-inspiring distance normally perceived between humans and their gods through ritual, according to Joseph Campbell, is "the one great story of myth: that in the beginning we were united with the source, but that we were separated from it and now we must find a way to return."

Restoring this original state between man and his spiritual sources is the promise of all the great systems of belief from from early hunting cultures to Christian theology where Jesus provides the path to God to Buddism, where oneness can be reached by following the tecahings of Buddha, to Islam, where reconciliation is achieved through submission to the will of al-Lah.

The ability of ritual to produce transcendent spiritual states is the result of of the effect of rhythmic ritualized behaviors such as prayer, music, meditation and physical exercise upon the hypothalamus and autonomic nervous systems, and eventually, the rest of the brain. These spiritual activities can lower blood pressure, decrease heart rate, lower rates of respiration, reduce levels of of the horomne cortisol, and create positive changes in the immune system according to Andrew Newberg et al in Why God Won't Go Away -Brain Science and the Biology of Belief.

Posted by Casey Kazan.

Neurotheology -Is God Hardwired in the Human Brain?

The God Delusion Richard Dawkins vs the Bishop of Oxford

Richard Dawkins, Darwin, & the Big Questions

Comments

the reason why God is still around is the need of humans to believe is something bigger than ourselves. The God we speak about is not God. It is created with our own minds. The real God is closer by than we might guess. It is life itself. The life energy that surrounds and penetrates all of us and the rest of the planet we live on.

Umm... I'm not sure abt your source, but the word for the Muslim god is Allah, a single word.

Hi Sam: it's spelled either way: Allah common English; other variants the Islamic spelling. Best, Casey

Post a comment

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/2145844/17756980

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference The Biology of Awe: