by Steve Connor
Science Correspondent
LA Times, Wednesday 29 October 1997
SCIENTISTS believe they have discovered a "God module" in the brain which could be responsible for man's evolutionary instinct to believe in religion.
A study of epileptics who are known to have profoundly spiritual experiences has located a circuit of nerves in the front of the brain which appears to become electrically active when they think about God.
The scientists said that although the research and its conclusions are preliminary, initial results suggest that the phenomenon of religious belief is "hard-wired" into the brain.
Epileptic patients who suffer from seizures of the brain's frontal lobe said they frequently experience intense mystical episodes and often become obsessed with religious spirituality.
A team of neuroscientists from the University of California at San Diego said the most intriguing explanation is that the seizure causes an overstimulation of the nerves in a part of the brain dubbed the "God module".
"There may be dedicated neural machinery in the temporal lobes concerned with religion. This may have evolved to impose order and stability on society," the team reported at a conference last week.
The results indicate that whether a person believes in a religion or even in God may depend on how enhanced is this part of the brain's electrical circuitry, the scientists said.
Dr Vilayanur Ramachandran, head of the research team, said the study involved comparing epileptic patients with normal people and a group who said they were intensely religious.
Electrical monitors on their skin a standard test for activity in the brain's temporal lobes showed that the epileptics and the deeply religious displayed a similar response when shown words invoking spiritual belief.
Evolutionary scientists have suggested that belief in God, which is a common trait found in human societies around the world and throughout history, may be built into the brain's complex electrical circuitry as a Darwinian adaptation to encourage co-operation between individuals.
If the research is correct and a "God module" exists, then it might suggest that individuals who are atheists could have a differently configured neural circuit.
A spokesman for Richard Harries, the Bishop of Oxford, said whether there is a "God module" is a question for scientists, not theologians. "It would not be surprising if God had created us with a physical facility for belief," he said.
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Copyright © 1997 The Seattle Times Company
Wednesday, Oct. 29, 1997
Brain region may be linked to religion
by Robert Lee Hotz
Los Angeles Times
NEW ORLEANS - No one knows why humanity felt its first religious stirrings, but researchers at University of California at San Diego reported yesterday that the human brain may be hard-wired to hear the voice of heaven, in what researchers said was the first effort to address the neural basis of religious expression.
In an experiment with patients suffering from an unusual form of epilepsy, researchers at the UC San Diego brain and perception laboratory found that the parts of the brain's temporal lobe - which the scientists quickly dubbed the "God module" - may affect how intensely a person responds to religious beliefs.
People suffering this type of seizure have long reported intense mystical and religious experiences as part of their attacks but also are unusually preoccupied with mystical thoughts between seizures. That led this team to use these patients as a way of investigating the relationship between the physical structure of the brain and spiritual experiences.
In a carefully designed experiment, the researchers found that one effect of the patients' seizures was to strengthen their brain's involuntary response to religious words, leading the scientists to suggest a portion of the brain was naturally attuned to ideas about a supreme being.
"It is not clear why such dedicated neural machinery . . . for religion may have evolved," the team reported yesterday at a meeting of the Society for Neuroscience in New Orleans. One possibility, the scientists said, was to encourage tribe loyalty or reinforce kinship ties or the stability of a closely knit clan.
The scientists emphasized that their findings in no way suggest that religion is simply a matter of brain chemistry. "These studies do not in any way negate the validity of religious experience or God," the team said. "They merely provide an explanation in terms of brain regions that may be involved."
Until recently, most neuroscientists confined their inquiries to research aimed at alleviating the medical problems that affect the brain's health, and to attempts to fathom its fundamental neural mechanisms. Emboldened by their growing understanding of how the brain works, however, scientists are now investigating the relationship between the brain, human consciousness and a range of intangible mental experiences.
Craig Kinsely, an expert in psychology and neuroscience at the University of Richmond in Virginia, called the new study "intriguing."
"People have been tickling around the edges of consciousness, and this sort of research plunges in," Kinsely said. "There is the quandary of whether the mind created God or God created the mind. This is going to shake people up, but (any conclusion) is very premature."
Vilayanur Ramachandran, the senior scientist involved in the experiment and the director of the center for brain and cognition at UC San Diego, said, "We are skating on thin ice. We are only starting to look at this.
"The exciting thing is that you can even begin to contemplate scientific experiments on the neural basis of religion and God."
| What's happened to Mom? |
A certain rare kind of brain damage can lead to a perceptual anomaly called "Capgras" syndrome (the spelling here is uncertain). The victims sound like refugees from the classic '50's science fiction thriller movie, "Invasion of the Body Snatchers." When confronted by a familiar face, they will express confusion, saying "strange, that person looks just like my Mom, but she's not; she's an impostor." The problem seems to be somewhere in the chain of connections between the various subsections of the brain that deal with recognition of a face. The pattern recognition itself happens in the temporal lobes, and the limbic system is where some specific significance to the act of recognition is attached. But the process is not complete until it has been passed off to the hypothalamus, where the emotional reaction to the recognition, if any, will be invoked.
In rare cases, damage will be specific enough to allow recognition, while blocking the normal emotional response, leading the victim to report a confused sense of unreality when viewing familiar faces. More objective evidence can be gathered by testing galvanic skin response, which confirms that the emotional response to viewing Mom, or Mom's picture, is much lower than normal, about the same as in viewing the face of a stranger.
Put the two people together on the telephone, however, and it is family reunion time, complete with the full emotional reaction, and a high galvanic skin response. Only when the mode of recognition is based in the interpretation of visual information is there a problem.
| Amputating a Phantom Limb |
Another line of evidence suggesting that "illusion" plays a role in the construction of the "self" comes from the case of phantom limb pain. People who have for some reason lost a limb may have the sensation that the limb is still there, sometimes taking up, in the patient's own perception, a cramped position and exhibiting chronic pain. Ramachandran has found some clinical success in treating such patients by asking them to "exercise" the phantom limb with the aid of an inexpensive "virtual reality" device, a mirror arranged so that the existing limb is seen as occupying the position of the phantom. By attempting to voluntarily move both limbs in symmetrical motions, with the visual reinforcement of watching the "phantom" in the mirror, patients can come eventually to perceive that the limb has moved to a more comfortable permanent position, or has disappeared entirely, with, more importantly, a reduction or elimination of the perceived pain.
| The Pinocchio Effect |
Ramachandran also described a couple of perceptual illusions that anyone can try with some friends. In one, the person who is to experience the illusion is seated with eyes closed or blindfolded in a chair directly behind another seated person. The "therapist" manipulates the subject's hand so that the subject's forefinger strokes and taps the nose of the person in front. At the same time, the "therapist" uses the forefinger of his other hand to stroke the subject's own nose using an identical pattern of touches and strokes. Before long, the subject will report a "Pinocchio" effect, imagining his own nose to be two feet long, or else his arm to be in two places at once.
| Virtual Mayhem |
In what sounds to be a really jolting demonstration, he also described having a seated subject place one hand below a sturdy table. Then, with one hand the "therapist" strokes and taps the back of the hand under the table, while with the other he again performs the same stimulations, this time to the hard tabletop, just above the subject's hand, while the subject watches. Soon the subject may report that he feels his hand to be rising through the table, or even becoming part of the table surface. The real test comes when the "therapist" quickly grabs a large hammer and pounds the spot on the table that he has been tapping and stroking. Even without seeing the experiment, it is easy to imagine the reaction that Ramachandran reports -- great consternation and shock followed quickly by relief on the part of the subject when he realizes that his hand is really safe under the table. (This one is somewhat reminiscent of a scene from the movie of Frank Herbert's Dune, where a young man's powers of self-control are tested by placing his hand in a box that is said to "contain pain".)
| Through the Looking Glass |
So he places the mirror in front of the patient, a bit to the "good" side, and angled such that the object in question is now visible, in the mirror, on the "good" (say, right) side. The object is still in reality to the patient's left, but now she will be able to find it, describe it, and talk about it in a seemingly normal fashion. That is, until she is asked to reach out and touch the item. Then a hand goes out and hits the mirror. "Is there a problem?" "Yes, I can't get at it, because that mirror is in the way." The patient is reaching to the right, the "good" side, and still neglecting the left.
The troubling thing about this is that this is an intelligent person, familiar with the object, and also familiar with mirrors. Place the mirror face-on, and ask the patient to touch her own face, and the hand will go to the face as expected (the right side only, of course). No reaching out to the mirror, no complaints about a piece of glass in the way. But for objects in the area of neglect, even the known physics of a mirror can't bring that area back into the patient's world of reality. If the object exists, it must be somewhere in the "real" world to the right.
Ramachandran then poses a troubling question. What if a neurophysiologist, who had studied this syndrome for many years, and was very familiar with it were to have a stroke that produced the same brain damage. Would he be able to "understand" the problem enough to overcome it, in some way, through sheer force of intellect? Would he be able to, perhaps, use a mirror to investigate the "lost" world on the neglected side? Or would it still be, even to the neurophysiologist, an insuperable barrier?
And then the real hair-raising question: "How do I know I am not now such a neurophysiologist?"
| "The God Module" -- "NOT?" |
Certain kinds of epilepsy have long been noted to be associated with a heightened sense of religiosity. After having one of their brain electrical storms, patients may actually speak of having had a "religious experience," or say that they now "know why there is a cosmos." Other symptoms of some temporal lobe epileptics can be hypergraphia (writing large, complicated tomes, often of mystical or personally religious significance) and frequent conversions (to several different religions in sequence). A known feature of epilepsy is what is known as "kindling," the strengthening of neurophysiological connections, often involving the limbic system.
Ramachandran now reports three patients in which he claims that a kindling of connections (to the amygdala, I believe he said) is associated with a specific and selective heightening of response, as measured by galvanic skin response, to religious words and icons. He believes that this can be interpreted as a change in part of the brain leading to either a heightening of religious emotion, or alternatively, perhaps to an enhancement of other emotions or perceptions which lead, incidentally, to to a heightened religious belief (everything feels weird, so the individual "wants to believe in something" to provide an explanatory context for the weirdness).
| Reviewers Conclusions and Commentary |
Ramachandran, putting a Hindu "spin" on the situation, concludes that none of this should really bother us. He sees this as just another in the chain of findings from cosmology to evolution that have served to disabuse humanity from the folly of taking themselves too seriously. All the "great discoveries," Freud concluded, were of this kind, in some way "debasing or humiliating humanity", removing them from yet another supposed position of privilege in the cosmos. For some reason, Freud said, we seem to like to do that to ourselves.
Finding that our perceptions of God are neuro-physiological may mean that God doesn't really exist. It may also mean that our left arm that was amputated in a streetcar accident, but still hurts, doesn't exist either. Maybe the left side of our dinner plate doesn't exist. Or maybe it does. The point is, we can't really know for sure.
The reason this shouldn't bother us is that we haven't really lost any privileges. We never had such a privileged position in the first place. The Earth has always gone around the sun, our bodies always have been an evolutionary derivation from something like an ancestral bonobo, and our ideas of God are and always have been an emotional reaction to life in an uncertain, but socially significant world. And our best bet for an honest understanding of the real world has always been through the cooperative social enterprise of science, rather than in the cosmic meanings suggested by the psychic (or psychotic) subjective experiences of some isolated individual human brains, and the credulous reactions to them encouraged by religious faith. As Bronowski said, "Science is a tribute to what we can know although we are fallible."
None of that stops Ramachandran from seeing it all as the eternal dance of Shiva, the creator and the destroyer. If you never were really a "self," separated from the unfolding drama of the universe, then there is nothing really to mourn when death pulls us back into that drama which continues to unfold.
But there is nothing here, either, to prevent the Christian, contra Ramachandran, to conclude that all of this neurophysiology is just a material reflection of God's true plan for our lives and the mode of interaction of our immaterial souls with the mere matter of this material existence. If you really want to believe in a spiritual reality, no amount of demonstrations of material-world, neurophysiological, genetic, or cosmological facts, however probable and compelling, will ever swamp such a belief.
That's the trouble with most dialogue between science and religion -- it turns out to be monologue rather than dialogue, in the course of which the findings of science are swallowed whole by theology, while the ethical core of science goes begging.