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Soothing God’s Brain: Why Religion is Bliss

2010-06-22
By

The iconic image of the “self-righteous” religious believer is a cliché of postmodernism. Dogmatic clerics in the middle east smile with satisfaction while they denounce the infidels. Cable TV preachers wince ecstatic eyes to heaven, praising God all the way.

The famously self-righteous Jerry Falwell smirked with conviction that the 9/11 atrocities were “divine retribution” for America’s sins.

It’s a notable mien among true believers of any faith: a self-contented look of homemade rapture that stinks suspiciously of George Clooney’s Southparkian smug.

But now I get it.  Smug actors and smiling preachers are brainsoothing.

In a new book called God’s Brain, anthropologist Lionel Tiger and co-author Michael McGuire provide the evolutionary and neurochemical narrative that may explain something of Rev. Falwell’s bliss.

The story goes like this: about one hundred and fifty thousand ago, some unwashed human sat at the mouth of a cave on a moonless night and peered for a long time into the uncertain darkness. Listening intently, and no doubt worn from the mortal losses of everyday living, he (or perhaps she) made a profound realization.

Death — that took your mother, your father, your children, your mate, and everyone else in the whole hard world — would someday come for you, too.

The thought unfolded in a wave of neurochemical changes passing through the posterior medial frontal cortex, where decision-making and cognitive uncertainty are managed by the human brain.

A depressing thought, to be sure.  And,  as this was the first person ever to consider it, it made him quite lonely and sad.

In fact, the thought might have killed him much sooner than if he had just not had it in the first place. If it lingered, such a hopeless and depressing idea might actually cause harm. The neurotransmitter norepinephrine would be effected. Brain serotonin levels would drop. There is a good likelihood that concomitant loss of social status would reinforce the depressive state.

It’s easy to imagine how this sort of phenomenological realization might actually lead to personal extinction. The dimmed prospects for reproduction alone suggest nature would select against such a cognitive insight.

But, as the authors point out, the brain is unhappy with ambiguities and uncertainties. It likes to know what lurks in the tall grass. And also beneath the still waters of death.

“The prospect for complete nothingness after death appears to be bewildering and unendurable to many people,” write the authors. “So an antidote arises.”

The antidote is Religion: a comprehensible human narrative meant to “fill in the incompleteness of experience.”

For the authors, religion — or more precisely, the reinforcing triad of religious belief, socialization and ritual — is the cure to the disease of cold enlightenment.

“At least 80% of the adult world professes religious affiliation and a large proportion of these people actually engage in observable religious behavior,” they write, citing behaviors like prayer, church attendance, wearing a cross or other religious insignia, naming yourself a member of a church or mosque, or any time spent visualizing the afterlife.

Here are the facts:  about 2.1 billion human beings are self-identified Christians, 1.5 billion Muslims, and billions more adherents to the other 4200 cataloged religious groups on Earth. From art and architecture, to governance and war, religion has been a driver of human behavior across all societies throughout history, right up to our current era of tottering postmodernism.

The authors warn early that we  ”need both a zoom lens and a microscope to see religion,” thereby reducing human behavior — and the mind itself — to a consequence of biochemistry.

Leaving aside any direct criticism of religion — which the authors are scrupulous to avoid — it is nevertheless clear that Tiger and McGuire err firmly on the side of the secular, even to the point of its defense: The human brain “imagines and believes things for which there is no hard evidence. What else could produce such  astonishing ideas as the existence of life in other galaxies, gods, a designer of life on earth, animals with human motivations and personalities, an afterlife, hell, heaven, witches, demons, angels, and the certified sin of pride?”

But here is where the authors commit their own certified sin of reductionism. Should readers believe the premise that religiosity is entirely reducible to an evolutionary survival trick? By this standard, virtually any human institution — including science — must also be reducible to the level of a neurochemical event.

Which takes us away from anthropology and into the realm of physics.

The Greek philosopher Leucippus is widely credited with developing the first theory of atomism. In his vision, there were two kinds of essential states: one was solid, and the other was space.    As it turns out, his idea — for which there could be no scientific proof for another 2500 years — was eerily close to the truth.

Leucippus contemplated atoms, while Moses contemplated  God. If atoms can be discovered first in the mind of a man, perhaps God can be as well.

But the authors offer no such succor to the symbol-starved bipeds of the postmodern world. God’s Brain is over-populated with trees, but contains no discernible forest.

God’s BrainGods Brain is a fun read. Tiger and McGuire have done a fine job of presenting the materialist facts of neurochemistry, and the curious case of religiosity as a survival technique. I recommend the book for its powerful microscope, but don’t expect to find a telescope here.


Mike LaSalle is the publisher of
MensNewsDaily.com

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Didn't make Oprah's Book Club. And Ronnie doesn't care. Man up. Buy the book now on Amazon.com. Or listen to Ronnie tell a story at escaping-from-reality.com.


  • http://mensnewsdaily.com/author/mike-lasalle Mike LaSalle

    Stormbringer:

  • anti-religious snobbery
  • I don’t know what this means. My conclusion is that Tiger and McGuire are convinced secularists who have reduced the locus of faith to an accident of neurochemistry.

    I hope I made it clear that I disagree with their conclusion.

    Some people seem to have misunderstood the argument. I’ll try to be more bombastic next time. ;-)

  • http://stormbringer005.blogspot.com Stormbringer

    Right, that’s enough. I’m tired of the anti-religious snobbery here as well. Feel free to offend your readers because you feel a need to “prove” that you are so much more intelligent than those fools that believe in God. People like me will get fed up, cancel our subscriptions and remove MND links from our sites.

    All because we come here for other reason than to have you wave your bony middle fingers in our faces.

  • Unimpressed

    I liked this better 200 years ago when Feuerbach said it. I\’m sure he felt pretty smart too. At least when he said it, it seemed novel. It doesn\’t here. Perhaps reductionists such as these should leave writing about philosophy to those who won\’t repeat the same tired cliches that birthed the horrors of the 20th century, all in the name of materialist antitheism.

  • zevgoldman

    For one to posit that a father’s religious beliefs aren’t an important issue raised by an opposing attorney in a divorce/custody proceeding is asinine.
    The supposedly smirkng Jerry Falwell was far surpassed by the author of the article as well as some of the respondents to my post. The terms intolerant and narrow minded are apt descriptions of the latter.
    The knee jerk suppositions the anti-God respondents leapt to in reply to my post is telling. I stated no position relative to God or religion, though it appears some severly contorted their thinking, or exercised a bias, to find such a position.
    One person went so far as to state that feminists did attack men’s religious beliefs as if they no longer do so. Such a false claim nears the summit of stupidity.
    God has been and remains a sharp weapon of attack in the feminists’ arsenal.

  • http://avoiceformen.com/ Paul Elam

    God save us from religion.

    There is no subject other than God, in the history of man, for which people can only possess conjecture, but at the same time crow about endlessly with such absolute certainty.

    And this, despite zevgoldman’s bewildering comment, is that makes this review such a great piece of writing and such a fundamental part to a larger lesson. Mike just demonstrated that big minds see big pictures.

    I am compelled to shrink from religious zeal, as it is an affront to my intelligence. I shrink from smug atheistic condescension for the exact same reason.

    My personal vision of God is in the wonder of unknowing. I try to imagine infinity and cannot. I read quantum physics and get totally lost, and then am told I am supposed to get lost. And that is fine with me. I have learned to get some measure of comfort swimming in a sea of uncertainty.

  • Jabberwocky

    “For whatever reason you wish to place on it, there is a God-shaped emptiness in all of us. It will be filled with something.”

    “Some people realize why they do it, others don’t. It’s just to keep from having to admit to themselves what that void really is.”

    LOL! Yes, God is found in the void and vice versa. That is where I found him at least. I’m sure there are infinite paths to him however, but answers are not found without first asking the question. Only in the mirror of nothingness was I able to see back everything. Most people don’t bother to look into the void however, as they incorrectly believe it to be cold and uncaring and unecessary, instead of the sanctuary that it can be. Beyond that, most peoples most basic and fundamental mistake is simply this: God is not to be found within us (although he is there)nor is he found without us (he’s there to), so much as we are to be found within God. There can be as much God in a chair as there is in the bible as there is in a blackhole, but non are the complete picture. If one is searching for him, they are looking in the wrong place, because they’ve already found him. He is in their pocket, he is in their mind, he is in the cosmos surrounding them. We don’t discover him or find him, we simply get to better understand our interwoven place in his omni-matrix, and we must never stop learning about this bond that binds us eternally to both everything and nothingness, and all that is inbetween. But maybe I’m just scratching a psychological itch, soothing cognitive dissonance, filling in the blanks with imaginary nonsense, or maybe I’ve added one plus one and discovered two. It is satisfying to discover the solution to a puzzle however. I’ll give you that.

  • http://riseofthezetamale.blogspot.com Zetamale

    of course religion has a comfort factor-part of the reason it is criticized when people believe in god just because they feel uneasy not believing when they are seen as not believing because they believe it is factual and/or a solid basic guidelines to life but rather just to make themselves feel comfortable

    zevgoldman-since when has the MRM strictly been bound to religious thought and had no tolerance of a secular view?

  • BC Philosopher

    zevgoldman that is complete and utter nonsense. The battle for mens rights is not a religious battle, not on any front whatsoever. Those who choose to fight it as such are only weakening their ability to bring the necessary messages to all ears. Read that again \”all ears\” not just ears that believe as you do. If you preach and force your beliefs in one hand you crush the message you carry in the other. Attacking religion is something feminists did, but it is not inherently connected to feminism. Galileo was likely not a feminist but he destroyed one of the long held beliefs of his day. You are making enormous emotionally charged errors of logic by drawing that conclusion. You have a right to complain if you feel your beliefs are beign disreprected, you do not have a right to call down nonsense of that somehow making any enemy of yours an enemy of men. Pull your thoughts together and refute the article in a valid way if you must lash against it.

  • Squiggy

    For whatever reason you wish to place on it, there is a God-shaped emptiness in all of us. It will be filled with something.

    A few people (politicians, “titans” of industry, actors) try to fill it with themselves, their own egos, but that’s just a joke. And all of these people are self-absorbed jerks.

    Some people try to “educate” it out of themselves, unquestionably believing anything taught to them by their “superiors” – i.e. anyone they believe knows more than them (as long as it relieves them of any real responsibility for their own actions. Most of these people say anyone who believes in a god is an idiot.

    Other people try to fill the gap with addictions, such as promiscuity, drinking, drugs, or pretty much anything else they can come up with. All of these are self-destructive.

    Some people realize why they do it, others don’t. It’s just to keep from having to admit to themselves what that void really is.

  • zevgoldman

    Feminist should be delighted to have the support of MND from its condemnation of religious men. Not only is the book review ill considered but the first four paragraphs of the review are charged with anti-religious snobbery. Thanks a lot for playing to the opposition







  • Right.

    Man up.

    Buy the book now on Amazon.com. Or listen to Ronnie tell a story at escaping-from-reality.com.

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