Religious Belief and the Brain
  Religious Belief and the Brain's 'God Spot'
By Steve Connor
March 11, 2009 7:20AM

Researchers used a functional magnetic-resonance imaging machine, 
which can identify the most energetically active regions of the 
brain. They found that people of different religious persuasions and 
beliefs, as well as atheists, all tended to use the same electrical 
circuits in the brain to solve a perceived moral conundrum.

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  Scientists say they have located the parts of the brain that 
control religious faith. And the research proves, they contend, that 
belief in a higher 
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is an evolutionary asset that helps human survival.

A belief in God is deeply embedded in the human brain, which is 
programmed for religious experiences, according to a study that 
analyzes why religion is a universal human feature that has 
encompassed all cultures throughout history.

Scientists searching for the neural God spot, which is supposed to 
control religious belief, believe that there is not just one but 
several areas of the brain that form the biological foundations of 
religious belief.

The researchers said their findings support the idea that the brain 
has evolved to be sensitive to any form of belief that improves the 
chances of survival, which could explain why a belief in God and the 
supernatural became so widespread in human evolutionary history.

"Religious belief and behavior are a hallmark of human life, with no 
accepted animal equivalent, and found in all cultures," said 
Professor Jordan Grafman, from the US National Institute of 
Neurological Disorders and Stroke in Bethesda, near Washington. "Our 
results are unique in demonstrating that specific components of 
religious belief are mediated by well-known brain networks, and they 
support contemporary psychological theories that ground religious 
belief within evolutionary-adaptive cognitive functions."

Scientists are divided on whether religious belief has a biological 
basis. Some evolutionary theorists have suggested that Darwinian 
natural selection may have put a premium on individuals if they were 
able to use religious belief to survive hardships that may have 
overwhelmed those with no religious convictions. Others have 
suggested that religious belief is a side effect of a wider trait in 
the human brain to search for coherent beliefs about the outside 
world. Religion and the belief in God, they argue, are just a 
manifestation of this intrinsic, biological phenomenon that makes the 
human brain so intelligent and adaptable.

The latest study, published in the journal Proceedings of the 
National Academy of Sciences, involved analyzing the brains of 
volunteers, who had been asked to think about religious and moral 
problems and questions. For the analysis, the researchers used a 
functional magnetic-resonance imaging machine, which can identify the 
most energetically active regions of the brain.

They found that people of different religious persuasions and 
beliefs, as well as atheists, all tended to use the same electrical 
circuits in the brain to solve a perceived moral conundrum and the 
same circuits were used when religiously inclined people dealt with 
issues related to God.

The study found that several areas of the brain are involved in 
religious belief, one within the frontal lobes of the cortex which 
are unique to humans and another in the more evolutionary-ancient 
regions deeper inside the brain, which humans share with apes and 
other primates, Professor Grafman said.

"There is nothing unique about religious belief in these brain 
structures. Religion doesn't have a God spot as such, instead it's 
embedded in a whole range of other belief systems in the brain that 
we use every day," Professor Grafman said.

The search for the God spot has in the past led scientists to many 
different regions of the brain. An early contender was the brains 
temporal lobe, a large section of the brain that sits over each ear, 
because temporal-lobe epileptics suffering seizures in these regions 
frequently report having intense religious experiences. One of the 
principal exponents of this idea was Vilayanur Ramachandran, from the 
University of California, San Diego, who asked several of his 
patients with temporal-lobe epilepsy to listen to a mixture of 
religious, sexual and neutral words while measuring their levels of 
arousal and emotional reactions. Religious words elicited an 
unusually high response in these patients.

This work was followed by a study where scientists tried to stimulate 
the temporal lobes with a rotating magnetic field produced by a God 
helmet. Michael Persinger, from Laurentian University in Ontario, 
found that he could artificially create the experience of religious 
feelings: the helmet's wearer reports being in the presence of a 
spirit or having a profound feeling of cosmic bliss.

Dr. Persinger said that about eight in every 10 volunteers report 
quasi-religious feelings when wearing his helmet. However, when 
Professor Richard Dawkins, an evolutionist and renowned atheist, wore 
it during the making of a BBC documentary, he famously failed to find 
God, saying that the helmet only affected his breathing and his limbs.

Other studies of people taking part in Buddhist meditation suggested 
the parietal lobes at the upper back region of the brain were 
involved in controlling religious belief, in particular the mystical 
elements that gave people a feeling of being on a higher plane during prayer.

Andrew Newberg, from the University of Pennsylvania, injected 
radioactive isotope into Buddhists at the point at which they 
achieved meditative nirvana. Using a special camera, he captured the 
distribution of the tracer in the brain, which led the researchers to 
identify the parietal lobes as playing a key role during this 
transcendental state.

Professor Grafman was more interested in how people coped with 
everyday moral and religious questions. He said that the latest 
study, published today, suggests the brain is inherently sensitive to 
believing in almost anything if there are grounds for doing so, but 
when there is a mystery about something, the same neural machinery is 
co-opted in the formulation of religious belief.

"When we have incomplete knowledge of the world around us, it offers 
us the opportunities to believe in God. When we don't have a 
scientific explanation for something, we tend to rely on supernatural 
explanations," said Professor Grafman, who believes in God. "Maybe 
obeying supernatural forces that we had no knowledge of made it 
easier for religious forms of belief to emerge."


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