Imagine you are about to have a mystical experience.
You may be absorbed in prayer in the silence of
your room, or perhaps you are meditating andhelped
by the lack of distraction to your sensesyou
are about to experience a feeling of unity with
the universe, an experience that will reinforce
your conviction that there really is another world
out there; that what we call reality is only a
pale reflection of the real thing. The question
is: what is going on in your brain while all this
is happening? Are your mental powers, in fact,
allowing you to, at least temporarily, gain a
higher view of the universe? Or, is your brain
simply malfunctioning under unusual circumstances
and playing tricks on you? In the following, I
will lay out the evidence as best as we can assess
it; by the end of this essay, you may wish to
look into this matter more carefully and decide
for yourself.
Andrew Newberg and Eugene DAquili, two
researchers interested in the neurobiology of
mystical experiences, carried out an intriguing
set of experiments. They asked Buddhist meditators
and Franciscan nuns, respectively, to try to achieve
a state of deep meditation or prayer while in
an isolated room in a laboratory. The subjects
were hooked to a computerized scanning machine
that could visualize which parts of their brains
were unusually active or inactive. The results
were very similar in the two cases. For one thingand
not surprisinglythe brains of the meditators
and nuns activated areas that are associated with
intense concentration: praying or meditating is
an intellectual activity that requires effort
on the part of the brain. More interestingly,
Newberg and DAquili saw that another region
of the brains of their subjects was going almost
completely dead: the posterior superior parietal
lobe. This area is known to be in charge of determining
the boundaries of ones body, a fundamental
task for any living being because it allows us
to navigate a complex three-dimensional world
with no more accidents than occasionally spilling
the coffee.
We know that the posterior superior parietal
lobe plays that particular role because there
are patients with damage in this same region who
literally cannot move around without falling,
missing the chair they intended to sit on, and
generally having a fuzzy understanding of where
their body ends and the rest of the universe begins.
It is a truly awful condition, one of many that
have taught neurobiologists so much about the
inner workings of the human brain.
Now, what is interesting is that Newberg and
DAquilis subjects described their
mystical experience in an uncanny similar way
to the reports of brain-damaged patients: they
said that, at the peak of their meditation or
prayer, they felt one with the universe,
feeling a dissolution of their bodies into the
wholeness of reality. The brain scans supported
their interpretation of what was happening: because
of the low level of sensorial stimuli (the experiments
were being conducted in dark rooms with no sounds)
the brain was fed little in the way of information
about the outside world and simply shut down the
corresponding areas (possibly to save energy:
the brain is by far the metabolically most costly
organ we have).
The question is: where the Franciscan nuns and
Buddhist meditators really accessing an alternate
reality, or where they simply experiencing an
odd side effect of putting their brains under
unusual circumstances?
Michael Persinger is a Canadian neurobiologist
who, like Newberg and DAquili, is interested
in scientifically investigating mystical experiences.
He has started out with the known fact that some
patients who suffer from seizures in the temporal
lobes are subject to auditory or visual hallucinations,
which they often interpret as mystical experiences.
Some of these patients are convinced that they
talked to God and that, as a result, they gain
a special cosmic insight into reality,
consciousness, and the meaning of life. Persinger
set out to literally repeat these experiences
under controlled laboratory conditions. He built
a helmet that causes small, intense, and directed
magnetic fields inside the brain to simulate micro-seizures
that do not cause any permanent damage. In perfectly
Victorian tradition, the good doctor has experimented
upon himself and found that magnetically induced
seizures in the temporal lobes do indeed generate
the same sort of hallucinations and mystical experiences
reported by the patients.
Again, what is going on? Is Persingers
helmet a machine that can potentially put everybody
in direct contact with God, or does it show that
many mystical experiences are in fact caused my
seizures, that is by a malfunction of the normal
brain circuitry?
Here is where the facts end and the theorizing
begins. From the point of view of purely logical
possibilities, the faulty-brain-under-unusual-circumstances
and the triggered-real-mystical-experiences
interpretations are both possible, and we are
free to believe whatever fits better with our
general outlook on such matters. However, I would
argue that by far the simplest and most reasonable
explanation of the facts is indeed the naturalistic
one (i.e., that we are witnessing a temporary
malfunction of the brain triggered by abnormal
conditions such as sensorial deprivation or seizures).
Why? First, this interpretation fits with all
we know about the brain, the phenomenon of hallucinations,
and even the natural tendency of human beings
to invent explanations when faced with unusual
sense data. Second, if God really built that ability
in our brains for the purpose of communicating,
why did He choose to make it much easier for some
individuals and essentially impossible for others
to achieve such a state of blessing? Third, it
is interesting that different subjects interpret
their experiences differently, depending on their
cultural background and previous beliefs, again
something that fits better with a naturalistic
explanation than with the refined plan of a supernatural
being.
Either way, youll have to use your brain
to reach a conclusion, but how do you know that
you are not having a seizure that is biasing your
judgment? Isnt the human brain a wonderful
thing to ponder with and about?
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