ABSTRACT

In the 1990s great strides were taken in clarifying how the brain is involved in behaviors that, in the past, had seldom been studied by neuroscientists or psychologists. This book explores the progress begun during that momentous decade in understanding why we behave, think and feel the way we do, especially in those areas that interface with religion. What is happening in the brain when we have a religious experience? Is the soul a product of the mind which is, in turn, a product of the brain? If so, what are the implications for the Christian belief in an afterlife? If God created humans for the purpose of having a relationship with him, should we expect to find that our spirituality is a biologically evolved human trait? What effect might a disease such as Alzheimer's have on a person's spirituality and relationship with God? Neuroscience and psychology are providing information relevant to each of these questions, and many Christians are worried that their religious beliefs are being threatened by this research. Kevin Seybold attempts to put their concerns to rest by presenting some of the scientific findings coming from these disciplines in a way that is understandable yet non-threatening to Christian belief.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter |18 pages

Neuroscience

chapter |12 pages

Psychology

chapter |20 pages

Religion

chapter |8 pages

Philosophy of Science

chapter |14 pages

Integration Issues

chapter |12 pages

Brain and Religion

chapter |20 pages

The Self

chapter |18 pages

Evolutionary Psychology

chapter |12 pages

Religion/Spirituality and Health

chapter |8 pages

The Future?