Religion and the Body

Modern Science and the Construction of Religious Meaning

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This book reflects on the implications of neurobiology and the scientific worldview on aspects of religious experience, belief, and practice. Just as interest in the neurosciences and related fields has burgeoned in contemporary society, interest in the fields of neuroscience and cognitive studies is also growing within the religious studies academy, and reflection on these shifts is well overdue. How do religious practitioners negotiate the interconnection of science and religion? What can the neurosciences add to scholars’ understanding of religion and to how humans construct religious meaning? Chapters address these questions by investigating religious experience and authority, the cultural construction and deconstruction of the body, and cross-cultural appropriations of the body.
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David Cave, Ph.D. (1989), Regional Director, University of Michigan, has published widely on the phenomenology and comparative study of religion, including Mircea Eliade's Vision for a New Humanism (1993) and "The Role of the Authoritative in the Comparative Process" (2006).

Rebecca Sachs Norris, Ph.D. (1999) in Religious Studies/Anthropology, Boston University, is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Merrimack College. Her publications include Toying with God: The World of Religious Games and Dolls (2010) and articles on religion, neuroscience and body.

Contributors include: Whitney Bauman, David Cave, Núria Farré-Barril, James Haag, Jagbir Jhutti-Johal, Mira Karjalainen, John McGraw, Rebecca Sachs Norris, Eric Repphun, Arthur Saniotis, Sebastian Schüler, and Deana Weibel.
TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction

SECTION one: NEUROBIOLOGY AND SOURCES OF RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE AND AUTHORITY

Reading the Body, Reading Scripture: The Implications of Neurobiology on the Study and Interpretation of Scripture
David Cave

De/Constructing Transcendence: The Emergence of Religious Bodies
James W. Haag and Whitney A. Bauman

Tongues of Men and Angels: Assessing the Neural Correlates of Glossolalia
John J. McGraw

Synchronized Ritual Behavior: Religion, Cognition and the Dynamics of Embodiment
Sebastian Schüler

SECTION two: CULTURE AND THE DE- AND RE-CONSTRUCTION OF THE BODY

Religion, Neuroscience and Emotion: Some Implications of Consumerism and Entertainment Culture
Rebecca Sachs Norris

Every Story is a Ghost: Chuck Palahniuk and the Reenchantment of Suffering
Eric Repphun

Attaining Transcendence: Transhumanism, the Body, and the Abrahamic Religions
Arthur Saniotis

SECTION three: (CROSS) CULTURAL APPROPRIATIONS OF THE BODY

Magnetism and Microwaves: Religion as Radiation
Deana L. Weibel

Scientific Approaches to the Body in the Spiritual-Physical Marketplace
Mira Karjalainen

Sleep Deprivation: Asceticism, Religious Experience and Neurological Quandaries
Núria M. Farré-i-Barril

Sikhism and Mental Illness: Negotiating Competing Cultures
Jagbir Jhutti-Johal

Bibliography

Index
All those interested in neurobiology and religion, contemporary culture and religion, theology and embodiment, anthropology, sociology, and psychology of religion, including scholars, students, educated laymen, academic and public libraries.
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