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The Cognitive Neuroscience of Religious Experience

The Cognitive Neuroscience of Religious Experience

The Cognitive Neuroscience of Religious Experience

Decentering and the Self
2nd Edition
Patrick McNamara, Boston University
June 2022
Paperback
9781108977890
$34.99
USD
Paperback
USD
Hardback

    The Cognitive Neuroscience of Religious Experience, now updated and expanded in a new edition, updates key topics covered in the first edition including: decentering and self-transformation, supernatural agent cognitions, mystical states, religious language, ritualization, and religious group agency. It expands upon the first edition to include major findings on brain and religious experience over the past decade, focusing on methodology, future thinking, and psychedelics. It provides an up-to-date review of brain-based accounts of religious experiences, and systematically examines the rationale for utilizing neuroscience approaches to religion. While it is primarily intended for religious studies scholars, people interested in comparative religion, philosophy of religion, cultural evolution, and personal self-transformation will find an account of how such transformation is accomplished within religious contexts.

    • Updates and expands on topics covered in the first edition, with three new chapters
    • Evaluates the significance, as well as the limitations, of neuroscience data and approaches on religion
    • Presents a systematic, theoretical neurobiology of the Self and how it relates to religious experiences

    Reviews & endorsements

    'A very welcome update of the most important book to date on the neuroscience of religion.' Robin Dunbar, Professor of Evolutionary Psychology, University of Oxford, UK

    'Patrick McNamara's brilliant synthesis of the structural and functional neuroscience literature with research on religious belief in the 2nd edition of The Cognitive Neuroscience of Religious Experience should be required reading for researchers and students entering this field, and for experts wanting a current state-of-the-art reappraisal of the religious brain.' Jordan Grafman, Professor of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Northwestern University, USA

    'McNamara expertly expands the frontier of the neuroscience of religion by integrating state-of-the-art research on psychedelics, embodiment, social cognition, predictive processing and more. In my opinion, the best book available on the topic; McNamara's theorizing is cutting-edge and should be required reading for any scholar who seeks to understand how religious experience works in human brains.' Uffe Schjødt, Aarhus University, Denmark

    'The 1st edition of The Cognitive Neuroscience of Religious Experience was an important book for the cognitive science of religion because of its introduction of the concept of decentering. This 2nd edition is an indispensable book for the cognitive science of religion. It is practically a whole new book in which decentering is integrated into 4E cognitive science and the predictive processing framework. McNamara offers powerful cognitive neuroscientific explanations for how altered states of consciousness, such as in psychedelic and mystical experience, and ritual practices can lead to profound transformations of the self that are both highly adaptive and deeply meaningful. This is a central book for anyone interested in addressing the Meaning Crisis that faces us today.' John Vervaeke, University of Toronto, Canada

    'This book is THE place to go for reliable, up-to-date information about the cognitive neuroscience of religious and spiritual experiences. It is tricky territory and Patrick McNamara is the world's best guide, by far.' Wesley J. Wildman, Boston University and the Center for Mind and Culture, USA

    See more reviews

    Product details

    June 2022
    Paperback
    9781108977890
    350 pages
    228 × 150 × 15 mm
    0.43kg
    Not yet published - available from February 2025

    Table of Contents

    • Acknowledgments
    • 1. Introduction: assumptions and reasons
    • 2. On decentering
    • 3. On the self and the divided self
    • 4. The cultural and evolutionary background to the neuroscience of religion
    • 5. Neurology of religious experiences
    • 6. Psychedelics and religious experiences
    • 7. Mystical experiences
    • 8. Religious experiences and transformative experiences
    • 9. Supernatural agents and god concepts
    • 10. Ritual
    • 11. Religious language
    • 12. Group effects and religion.
      Author
    • Patrick McNamara , Boston University

      Patrick McNamara is Distinguished Professor of Psychology at Northcentral University, California. For 20 years he was based at Boston University School of Medicine where he was Associate Professor of Neurology. He has published extensively on the topics of neurology and psychology of religion, including Religion, Neuroscience and the Self: A New Personalism (2020). He is a founding editor of Religion, Brain and Behavior, and co-founder of the Institute for the Biocultural Study of Religion.