ABSTRACT

Human Interaction with the Divine, the Sacred, and the Deceased brings together cutting-edge empirical and theoretical contributions from scholars in fields including psychology, theology, ethics, neuroscience, medicine, and philosophy, to examine how and why humans engage in, or even seek spiritual experiences and connection with the immaterial world. In this richly interdisciplinary volume, Plante and Schwartz recognize human interaction with the divine and departed as a cross-cultural and historical universal that continues to concern diverse disciplines. Accounting for variances in belief and human perception and use, the book is divided into four major sections: personal experience; theological consideration; medical, technological, and scientific considerations; and psychological considerations with chapters addressing phenomena including prayer, reincarnation, sensed presence, and divine revelations. Featuring scholars specializing in theology, psychology, medicine, neuroscience, and ethics, this book provides a thoughtful, compelling, evidence-based, and contemporary approach to gain a grounded perspective on current understandings of human interaction with the divine, the sacred, and the deceased. Of interest to believers, questioners, and unbelievers alike, this volume will be key reading for researchers, scholars, and academics engaged in the fields of religion and psychology, social psychology, behavioral neuroscience, and health psychology. Readers with a broader interest in spiritualism, religious and non-religious movements will also find the text of interest.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

part I|52 pages

The Personal and Storied Experience of Divine and Departed Communication

chapter 1|16 pages

Marginalizing the Sacred

7The Clinical Contextualization of Sensed Presence Experiences

part II|76 pages

Theological Considerations

chapter 4|15 pages

Travels Beyond

chapter 5|16 pages

“God Saw … and God Knew …”

Science, Divine Action, and Un/answered Prayers

chapter 6|15 pages

“My Soul Is Not Me”

Monistic Anthropologies and Participatory Prayer

part III|78 pages

Medical, Technological, and Scientific Considerations

chapter 9|17 pages

Love and Healing

chapter 11|14 pages

Murder, Truth and Justice, and Religion

Altered Carbon and the Ambiguity of Real Death

chapter 12|16 pages

Ghosts and Gods in the Machine

Human-Machine Interfaces in Transhuman Philosophy

chapter |2 pages

Conclusions