cover image Mystical Mind

Mystical Mind

Eugene d'Aquili, Andrew B. Newberg. Augsburg Fortress Publishers, $23 (240pp) ISBN 978-0-8006-3163-5

How does the brain generate and process mystical states? What are the neurological explanations for religious experiences? How does the mind create myth, religious ritual and liturgy? The late D'Aquili (Brain, Symbol, and Experience) and Newberg, a researcher in nuclear medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, explore these and other questions in their exhilarating study of religion and the science of mind. The authors contend that since the ""mind and brain are responsible for all of our experiences, they are also the mediator for our experience of God."" Using the insights of neurology and neuropsychology, they develop a ""neurotheology"" that serves to explain how the mind functions to create religious experience. In the first section, the authors map out the structure of the brain, focusing on the parts that are most significant for understanding human emotion and cognition. Here the authors contend that the mind and brain form a kind of ""mystical union,"" and they examine the ways in which the mind/brain provides ""our advanced methods of experiencing and interpreting the external world."" The second section explores the relationships between myth, ritual, liturgy and the mystical mind. D'Aquili and Newberg assert that ""all religious and spiritual phenomena, including the concept and experience of God (Absolute Unitary Being), are generated by the brain and central nervous system."" The book's final section argues that ""Absolute Unitary Being (Pure Consciousness or God) paradoxically and counterintuitively generates experience and the world (including the brain)."" D'Aquili and Newberg make difficult scientific concepts understandable and accessible as they formulate this fresh approach to religion and science. (June)