Project Reason is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit foundation devoted to spreading scientific knowledge and secular values in society. The foundation draws on the talents of prominent and creative thinkers in a wide range of disciplines to encourage critical thinking and erode the influence of dogmatism, superstition, and bigotry in our world.

Donate to Project Reason

Join the Mailing List

Sign up to receive email updates from Project Reason.

Log in

 
not a member? Join here.
Forgot your password?

Twitter and Facebook

Follow Project Reason on Twitter

The Scripture Project

Browse the Bible, Qur’an or Book of Mormon for scriptural criticism, insights and careful annotation.

Most Recently Updated Passages

Religious Experience Linked to Brain’s Social Regions

Brandon Keim
Posted: October 6, 2009.

Print: Wired Magazine

godflat

Brain scans of people who believe in God have found further evidence that religion involves neurological regions vital for social intelligence.

In other words, whether or not God or Gods exist, religious belief may have been quite useful in shaping the human mind’s evolution.

“The main point is that all these brain regions are important for other forms of social cognition and behavior,” said Jordan Grafman, a National Institutes of Health cognitive scientist.

In a study published Monday in Public Library of Science ONE, Grafman’s team used an MRI to measure the brains areas in 40 people of varying degrees of religious belief.

People who reported an intimate experience of God, engaged in religious behavior or feared God, tended to have larger-than-average brain regions devoted to empathy, symbolic communication and emotional regulation. The research wasn’t trying to measure some kind of small “God-spot,” but looked instead at broader patterns within the brains of self-reported religious people.

Read the full article | Print this article

Comments (4)

Andy Thomson talks about this MRI study in this presentation…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1iMmvu9eMrg&feature=channel_page

“Andy Thomson gives his talk titled ‘Why We Believe in Gods’ at the American Atheist 2009 convention in Atlanta, Georgia. “

posted on October 8, 2009
report this as inappropriate

You don't have permission to flag this entry.

Interesting idea…worth following up on certainly.  I’m glad that the caveats were noted, which leads me to believe that there’s essentially “nothing to see here”.

Not having read the full study, he appears to be stating not only a correlation, but also stating causality…perhaps prematurely.

posted on October 9, 2009
report this as inappropriate

You don't have permission to flag this entry.

lobotomy |ləˈbätəmē|
noun ( pl. -mies)
a surgical operation involving incision into the prefrontal lobe of the brain, formerly used to treat mental illness.

posted on October 11, 2009
report this as inappropriate

You don't have permission to flag this entry.

the language in the article has a hint of the eugenics argument.  A phrase like, “...present social sophistication…,” is highly subjective depending upon one’s point of view.  There are many elements of society that are hardly sophisticated.  How about our tendencies toward elitism, difference-based discrimination, fear of outsiders, etc.  Certainly, these aspects do not indicate an evolutionarily-advanced society.  bullsh@t!  May have been a decent study, but the interpretation lacks an informed perspective.

posted on October 13, 2009
report this as inappropriate

You don't have permission to flag this entry.