At last! The real origin of
"spiritual" experiences!
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Also: see
here for more
scientific evidence of this
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"With
implications for both supernatural and paranormal beliefs is the work of Michael Persinger
at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Canada.
Persinger places a motorcycle helmet specially modified with electromagnets on the
subject's head, who lies in a comfortable recumbent position in a soundproof room with
eyes covered. The electrical activity produced by the electromagnets
produces a magnetic field pattern that stimulates "microseizures" in the
temporal lobes of the brain (behind the temples) which, in turn, produces a number of what
can best be described as "spiritual" and "supernatural" experiences
- the sense of a presence in the room, an out-of-body experience, bizarre distortion of
body parts, and even religious feelings. Persinger calls these experiences "temporal
lobe transients", or increases and instabilities in neuronal firing patterns in the
temporal lobe.
How do they produce religious states? Our "sense of self", says
Persinger, is maintained by the left hemisphere temporal cortex. Under normal brain
functioning this is matched by the corresponding systems in the right hemisphere temporal
cortex. When these two systems become uncoordinated, such as during
a seizure or a transient event, the left hemisphere interprets the uncoordinated activity
as "another self", or a "sensed presence", thus accounting for
subjects' experiences of a "presence" in the room (which might be interpreted as
angels, demons, aliens, or ghosts), or leaving their bodies (as in near-death
experiences), or even "God". When the amygdala (deep-seated region of the brain
involved with emotion) is involved in the transient events, emotional factors
significantly enhance the experience which, when connected to spiritual themes, can be a
powerful force for intense religious feelings."
- p66, How We Believe, 2000, Michael Shermer
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Out-of-body experience recreated
Experts have found a way to trigger an out-of-body experience
in volunteers. The experiments, described in the Science journal, offer a
scientific explanation for a phenomenon experienced by one in 10 people.
BBC Online
28 Aug 2007
Two teams used virtual reality goggles to con the brain into thinking the
body was located elsewhere.
The visual illusion plus the feel of their real bodies being touched made
volunteers sense that they had moved outside of their physical bodies.
The researchers say their findings could have practical applications, such
as helping take video games to the next level of virtuality so the players
feel as if they are actually inside the game.
Clinically, surgeons might also be able to perform operations on patients
thousands of miles away by controlling a robotic virtual self.
Teleported
For some, out-of-body experiences or OBEs occurs spontaneously, while for
others it is linked to dangerous circumstances, a near-death experience, a
dream-like state or use of alcohol or drugs.
We feel that our self is located where the eyes are
UCL researcher Dr Henrik Ehrsson
One theory is that it is down to how people perceive their own body - those
unhappy or less in touch with their body are more likely to have an OBE.
But the two teams, from University College London, UK, and the Swiss Federal
Institute of Technology in Lausanne, believe there is a neurological
explanation.
Their work suggests a disconnection between the brain circuits that process
visual and touch sensory information may thus be responsible for some OBEs.
In the Swiss experiments, the researchers asked volunteers to stand in front
of a camera while wearing video-display goggles.
Through these goggles, the volunteers could see a camera view of their own
back - a three-dimensional "virtual own body" that appeared to be standing
in front of them.
When the researchers stroked the back of the volunteer with a pen, the
volunteer could see their virtual back being stroked either simultaneously
or with a time lag.
The volunteers reported that the sensation seemed to be caused by the pen on
their virtual back, rather than their real back, making them feel as if the
virtual body was their own rather than a hologram.
Volunteers
Even when the camera was switched to film the back of a mannequin being
stroked rather than their own back, the volunteers still reported feeling as
if the virtual mannequin body was their own.
And when the researchers switched off the goggles, guided the volunteers
back a few paces, and then asked them to walk back to where they had been
standing, the volunteers overshot the target, returning nearer to the
position of their "virtual self".
Dr Henrik Ehrsson, who led the UCL research, used a similar set-up in his
tests and found volunteers had a physiological response - increased skin
sweating - when they felt their virtual self was being threatened -
appearing to be hit with a hammer.
Dr Ehrsson said: "This experiment suggests that the first-person visual
perspective is critically important for the in-body experience. In other
words, we feel that our self is located where the eyes are."
Dr Susan Blackmore, psychologist and visiting lecturer at the University of
the West of England, said: "This has at last brought OBEs into the lab and
tested one of the main theories of how they occur.
"Scientists have long suspected that the clue to these extraordinary, and
sometimes life-changing, experiences lies in disrupting our normal illusion
of being a self behind our eyes, and replacing it with a new viewpoint from
above or behind."
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And
here is a real-life example confirming
a naturalistic explanation:
"Haunted House, Haunted Mind" premieres nationally on television in
Canada on CBC Newsworld's Roughcuts on Saturday 17 April 1999 at 10 PM EDT (with a repeat
on Sun 18 April at 4 PM EDT).
"Haunted House, Haunted Mind" is based on a true story by
writer-broadcaster Don Hill. In 1994, Don Hill and his family sold the house they'd been
living in, in Canmore, Alberta and moved out. They were convinced the house was haunted!
It was your standard house with the mysterious noises, the chilling waves of terror that
come to mind when one thinks of haunted houses. Once there was something that resembled
your standard ghost - a luminous, transparent human-sized thing - which vanished.
Frightened and intrigued, Hill kept a diary and set out to discover what was haunting his
house.
"Haunted House, Haunted Mind" takes viewers on Hill's four-year odyssey
to uncover what phenomenon was taking place. Hill consulted spiritual experts, brain
scientists and medical doctors in Canada and the United States, along with others who felt
they too had once been haunted by 'a presence.'
Hill volunteered as an experimental subject in a brain-science lab at Laurentian
University in Sudbury, Ontario run by Dr. Michael Persinger. It was
there his terrifying experience in the Canmore house was reproduced. The machine in the
laboratory stimulated his brain - he saw and 'felt' a synthetic ghost - convincing proof
to Hill of the effects of electromagnetic and geomagnetic forces on human perception. Hill
concluded that the 'ghost' was literally in his brain.
Is it possible electromagnetic radiation does not induce hallucinations, but
rather helps us to see what is already there? Did Hill see a ghost or not? "Haunted
House, Haunted Mind" is produced by Appropriate Entertainment Ltd., in
association with CBC Newsworld.
From: www.csicop.org/list/archive/0157.html |
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