Where Religious Belief And Disbelief Meet


Recommended Posts

ScienceDaily (Oct. 11, 2009) ? When it comes to religion, believers and nonbelievers appear to think very differently. But at the level of the brain, is believing in God different from believing that the sun is a star or that 4 is an even number?

While religious faith remains one of the most significant features of human life, little is known about its relationship to ordinary belief. Nor is it known whether religious believers differ from nonbelievers in how they evaluate statements of fact.

In the first neuroimaging study to systematically compare religious faith with ordinary cognition, UCLA and University of Southern California researchers have found that while the human brain responds very differently to religious and nonreligious propositions, the process of believing or disbelieving a statement, whether religious or not, seems to be governed by the same areas in the brain.

The study also found that devout Christians and nonbelievers use the same brain regions to judge the truth of religious and nonreligious propositions. The results, the study authors say, represent a critical advance in the psychology of religion. The paper appears Sept. 30 in the journal PLoS One.

Sam Harris, who recently completed his doctoral dissertation in the lab of Mark Cohen, a professor of psychiatry at the UCLA Staglin Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, was a lead author on the study. Jonas Kaplan, a research assistant professor at the USC's Brain and Creativity Institute, was the co-lead author.

The study involved 30 adults ? 15 committed Christians and 15 nonbelievers ? who underwent three functional MRI (fMRI) scans while evaluating religious and nonreligious statements as "true" or "false." The statements were designed to produce near perfect agreement between the two groups during nonreligious trials (e.g., "Eagles really exist") and near perfect disagreement during religious trials (e.g., "Angels really exist").

Contrasting belief and disbelief yielded increased activity in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (VMPFC), an area of the brain thought to be involved in reward and in judgments of self-relevance.

"This region showed greater activity whether subjects believed statements about God, the Virgin Birth, etc., or statements about ordinary facts," the authors said.

The case for belief being content-independent was further bolstered by the fact that while the trial statements accepted by religious believers were rejected by nonbelievers, and vice versa, the brains of both showed the same pattern of activity for belief and disbelief.

A comparison of all religious with all nonreligious statements suggested that religious thinking is more associated with brain regions that govern emotion, self-representation and cognitive conflict in both believers and nonbelievers, while thinking about ordinary facts is more reliant upon memory retrieval networks. Activity in the brain's anterior cingulate cortex, an area associated with cognitive conflict and uncertainty, suggested that both believers and nonbelievers experienced greater uncertainty when evaluating religious statements.

The study raises the possibility that the differences between belief and disbelief may one day be reliably distinguished by neuroimaging techniques.

"Despite vast differences in the underlying processing responsible for religious and nonreligious modes of thought," the authors write, "the distinction between believing and disbelieving a proposition appears to transcend content. These results may have many areas of application ? ranging from the neuropsychology of religion, to the use of 'belief-detection' as a surrogate for 'lie-detection,' to understanding how the practice of science itself, and truth-claims generally, emerge from the biology of the human brain."

Harris is the author of two New York Times best-sellers, "The End of Faith" and "Letter to a Christian Nation," which have been published in more than 15 languages, and is the co-founder and CEO of the The Reason Project. His writing has appeared in Newsweek, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Times of London, the Boston Globe, the Atlantic and many other journals.

Other authors on the study included Cohen, Susan Y. Bookheimer and Marco Iacoboni, of UCLA, and Ashley Curiel, of Pepperdine University. The authors report no conflict of interest.

Work in Dr. Cohen's lab is funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health.

Source

It is at this time unclear. We do know the same brain region appears to be involved in belief and disbelief. The rest of the article does not provide any conclusive evidence other than point to future research.

Still, isn't it strikingly interesting? You gotta wonder if something else is involved because religious and nonreligious modes of thoughts are quite disparate. :p

  • 1 month later...

umm... I found this study sort of useless. All it says is same region is used. That doesn't get us any closer to anything. What they need to find is why people believe in such nonsense and continue to believe in it after they have been proven so many times that what they believe in can not be, or at least has failed to be.

umm... I found this study sort of useless. All it says is same region is used. That doesn't get us any closer to anything.

I would have put it a bit more tactfully, but I tend to agree.

What they need to find is why people believe in such nonsense and continue to believe in it after they have been proven so many times that what they believe in can not be, or at least has failed to be.

They also need to learn why some people believe that only what they believe is right and everything they don't believe is nonsense. :p

No religion has ever been proven to be 100% correct, on the basis of fact.

I go on facts and facts only; not myths, rumours or fantasy.

Nobody has proven that God exists. Nobody has proven that Islam is incorrect. Nobody has proven that Christianity is correct.

The same applies to science - I will only believe it if it has been proven and is fact.

So, to sum up, I do not follow any religion for the reasons stated above and I do not see how others can when there is no proof that what they believe is correct.

What do you think makes them so different? They seem very much the same to me.

Calum points out part of the disparities in religious vs. non-relgious thinking:

No religion has ever been proven to be 100% correct, on the basis of fact.

I go on facts and facts only; not myths, rumours or fantasy.

Nobody has proven that God exists. Nobody has proven that Islam is incorrect. Nobody has proven that Christianity is correct.

The same applies to science - I will only believe it if it has been proven and is fact.

So, to sum up, I do not follow any religion for the reasons stated above and I do not see how others can when there is no proof that what they believe is correct.

It is at this time unclear. We do know the same brain region appears to be involved in belief and disbelief. The rest of the article does not provide any conclusive evidence other than point to future research.

Still, isn't it strikingly interesting? You gotta wonder if something else is involved because religious and nonreligious modes of thoughts are quite disparate. :p

A bit off-topic.. I always wondered about that because it seems so dodgy to me, scientists say this area here is responsible for X, that one for Y and so on.

Then they find people with half a brain still functioning properly and they say that the brain can rewire itself.

Then there are people that ARE brain damaged and they can't do certain things, so they say that that area of the brain was damaged beyond "repair" and the person can no longer talk, what happened to rewiring ?

I believe one thing about the brain, we don't know much about it, everything else seems very dodgy..

Well I'll say at least something on topic :p Due to my beliefs (or disbeliefs) about the brain I think the whole "research" went the wrong way, since we don't know squat about the brain, how can we be sure of anything we observe is true - and that we interpret it correctly.

Everyone agrees that we know the least about the brain. However, we do have evidence that certain brain regions are responsible for certain functions mainly due to lesion studies and post-mortem examination of diseased brains.

The fact that the neurons are plastic adds to the complications and our struggle to understand it.

Religion is an insult to human dignity. With or without it, you'd have good people doing good things and evil people doing bad things, but for "good" people to do bad things, it takes religion.

I would have to agree with most of what you say, except for the part where you say, "Religion is an insult to human dignity."

I have no problem with people who believe in Christianity, Judaism, and Islam etc. When I DO start having issues with them, is when what they believe in impinges on my life. Do your thing and I will do mine! I do not interfere with ?them? so why should they interfere with me!

I would have to agree with most of what you say, except for the part where you say, "Religion is an insult to human dignity."

I have no problem with people who believe in Christianity, Judaism, and Islam etc. When I DO start having issues with them, is when what they believe in impinges on my life. Do your thing and I will do mine! I do not interfere with "them" so why should they interfere with me!

+1 i hate it when they knock on my door i'll either say no i haven't seen your spaceship or get lost before i sick the dog on ya, don't get me wrong i don't have anything against religion just don't try crammin it down my throat

umm... I found this study sort of useless. All it says is same region is used. That doesn't get us any closer to anything. What they need to find is why people believe in such nonsense and continue to believe in it after they have been proven so many times that what they believe in can not be, or at least has failed to be.

Have you seen the world? I would hardly think everyone would be okay and accepting of the pointlessness there seems to be with life. I may be accepting of the fact that we're only here for a short time on this planet, but the thought that... when I die, I become nothing... I no longer wake... See anything... Be anything... Simply cease to exist. It scares me. I don't like to think about it. I don't go rushing to fool myself of course, but if this sort of thing can frighten me, it's easy to understand how stories and beliefs can be so heavily relied upon simply to help us get through our struggles in life and bring us hope.

If anything, I would really consider it a complex survival mechanism for the mind. Even someone who doesn't believe in all the fancy stories and relies on his/her science and ideas that sound much more logical, the part of the brain is still there, finding some sort of grasp on life. Otherwise, every atheist would have killed him or herself and there'd be no real idea of "atheism" other than the understanding that not believing will bring death.

I'm really tired right now, so if any of this doesn't really make sense, forgive me.

If anything, I would really consider it a complex survival mechanism for the mind. Even someone who doesn't believe in all the fancy stories and relies on his/her science and ideas that sound much more logical, the part of the brain is still there, finding some sort of grasp on life. Otherwise, every atheist would have killed him or herself and there'd be no real idea of "atheism" other than the understanding that not believing will bring death.

Or maybe we just don't need such silly reasoning to be able to function, and are quite able to accept that when you're dead, you're dead.

Personally, I've always thought that my knowing that we each only get ONE shot at life gives me a far greater respect for life than your average theist. They all seem to believe that when you die, you get another and much better life after this one, so really, it's not that big a deal if you die. You can twist that to think that it's not too much of a problem to end someone's earthly life a bit sooner than it would on it's own, or even just make their current life unpleasant, because they'll eventually go on to a much better one.

I, on the other hand, know full well that when your gone, your gone; so I'm not going to do anything to make someone else's shot at it unpleasant, or shorter. Mainly because I don't really want anyone to do that to me! ;)

umm... I found this study sort of useless. All it says is same region is used. That doesn't get us any closer to anything. What they need to find is why people believe in such nonsense and continue to believe in it after they have been proven so many times that what they believe in can not be, or at least has failed to be.

I think so too, and for several reasons.

1) the technology used is not nearly precise enough to determine what's happening. It can only determine with a enormous margin of error were metabolism is higher.?

2) There's no way of knowing what you are measuring, the activity can mean the brain is actively trying to suppress the illogic of the one and to promote the logic of the other.?

3) Obviously at some point belief and science need to be made aware to the consciousness, which happens also very obviously using the same area's of the brain

I think so too, and for several reasons.

1) the technology used is not nearly precise enough to determine what's happening. It can only determine with a enormous margin of error were metabolism is higher.?

2) There's no way of knowing what you are measuring, the activity can mean the brain is actively trying to suppress the illogic of the one and to promote the logic of the other.?

3) Obviously at some point belief and science need to be made aware to the consciousness, which happens also very obviously using the same area's of the brain

1) The principle behind fMRI makes it an excellent tool for study. It does not measure any particular metabolic process but simply show an increased neural activity in the specific region(s). This implies that the region(s) must be at least associated with the stimulated behaviour.

2) Refer to point 1.

3) Ditto.

+1 i hate it when they knock on my door i'll either say no i haven't seen your spaceship or get lost before i sick the dog on ya, don't get me wrong i don't have anything against religion just don't try crammin it down my throat

I have a problem with these people affecting legislation in the US. With them using their religious beliefs to define what is supposedly moral and immoral. Religion in the US goes beyond the church, it even defines our holidays. You know, Holy Days. There are so many Holy Days in the world, why does the US only support Judeo-Christian ones? Only in recent years have Holy Days from other religions begun to be recognized officially. I guess you can say it's because some religions are more popular than others that they get holidays, but employers and schools do not recognize niche religions or what those religions may require.

There is still a bias towards Christianity in the US, despite what the US government claims. And sometimes it is worse than that:

Less than two years after it was plunged into a rape scandal, the Air Force Academy is scrambling to address complaints that evangelical Christians wield so much influence at the school that anti-Semitism and other forms of religious harassment have become pervasive.

There have been 55 complaints of religious discrimination at the academy in the past four years, including cases in which a Jewish cadet was told the Holocaust was revenge for the death of Jesus and another was called a Christ killer by a fellow cadet.

-The Air Force is investigating a complaint from an atheist cadet who says the school is "systematically biased against any cadet that does not overtly espouse Christianity."

-The official academy newspaper runs a Christmas ad every year praising Jesus and declaring him the only savior. Some 200 academy staff members, including some department heads, signed it. Whittington noted the ad was not published last December.

-The academy commandant, Brig. Gen. Johnny Weida, a born-again Christian, said in a statement to cadets in June 2003 that their first responsibility is to their God. He also strongly endorsed National Prayer Day that year. School spokesman Johnny Whitaker said Weida now runs his messages by several other commanders.

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2005/4/19/162856/321

1) The principle behind fMRI makes it an excellent tool for study. It does not measure any particular metabolic process but simply show an increased neural activity in the specific region(s). This implies that the region(s) must be at least associated with the stimulated behaviour.

2) Refer to point 1.

3) Ditto.

Well, since FMRI is just another mathematical model it's only as good as the program that analyses the data.

Change a parameter and active becomes inactive.

Furthermore if a certain brainregion responds to a stimulus in the FMRI it is most likely secondhand.

The after the fact neural activity needed to correlate data in the brain to make it palatable for 'us' is huge, and overshadows the real activity which caused it because the FMRI has to low a resolution.

So all a FRMI shows that there's brainactivity, but what that activity actually does is complete guesswork.

So all a FRMI shows that there's brainactivity, but what that activity actually does is complete guesswork.

That's the primary purpose of using fMRI (to identify the areas involved in a particular behaviour). What more do you expect from it alone?

The significance of the study in the OP is that it gives us a starting point (if you don't know which regions are involved, how could you conduct further research?). People seem to think one study can nail down everything which kind of amuses me.

That's the primary purpose of using fMRI (to identify the areas involved in a particular behaviour). What more do you expect from it alone?

The significance of the study in the OP is that it gives us a starting point (if you don't know which regions are involved, how could you conduct further research?). People seem to think one study can nail down everything which kind of amuses me.

The problem is, what i tried to explain, is that it is not sure the areas that light up are the areas that are the cause of a certain observed activity.

Since the software that makes sense out of the enormous signal noise to discover a pattern is based on observations made it only shows that you can reproduce the observations with that software.

Which is as circular logic as you can get.

Furthermore since the largest activity observed will be in the after the fact processing of the brain of earlier incoming data you stand a more than even change you're looking in the wrong direction.

Until we can get a much higher resolution, and can make out between suppressing and strengthening activity it's anybody's? guess what it shows.

Which goes to show that if you start out looking for a certain confirmation you're quite likely to find it but need not reflect what actually happens.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Interesting share -- however it does not make sense: Email messages get stored somewhere, so how is Delta Chat "based on email" and decentralized without actually storing anything? By Web3 standard practices, the various Relays would require dedicated storage to make messages available to the recipients (like a large series of message queue channels, akin to racks of traditional post office boxes)... and Contacts must be two-way confirmed in order for encryption keys to be exchanged (ostensibly every key-pair is uniquely bound between sender and recipient) and the Relays would preserve the public keys in order to facilitate message carriage... or every device stores all sorts of keys and contact info. All of this to say, decentralized messaging is like running Bluesky nodes except instead of discovering/browsing public feeds by various posters (at the given node) these Delta Chats would be relaying encrypted messages (via Relays) that only trusted recipients would have the appropriate decryption key (their own private key) to read it. But this doesn't solve the "it's like email" sales pitch. The only way it's like email is that there's encrypted binary stuff being transported from your app into the federated ether of Delta Chat Relays for others to decrypt (hopefully only the intended recipient)... but outside of this federated relays framework, it is absolutely nothing like email.
    • Hasleo Backup Suite Free 5.8.2.2 by Razvan Serea Hasleo Backup Suite Free is a free Windows backup and restore software, which embeds backup, restore and cloning features, it is designed for Windows operating system users and can be used on both Windows PCs and Servers. The backup and restore feature of Hasleo Backup Suite can help you back up and restore the Windows operating systems, disks, partitions and files (folders) to protect the security of your Windows operating system and personal data. The cloning feature of Hasleo Backup Suite can help you migrate Windows to another disk, or easily upgrade a disk to an SSD or a larger capacity disk. System Backup & Restore / Disk/Partition Backup & Restore Backup Windows operating system and boot-related partitions, including user settings, drivers and applications installed in these partitions, which ensures that you can quickly restore your Windows operating system once it crashes. Viruses, power failure, or other unknown reasons may cause data loss, so it is a good habit to regularly back up the drive that stores important files, you can at least recover lost files from the backup image files in the event of a disaster. System Clone / Disk Clone / Partition Clone Migrate the Windows operating system from one disk to another SSD or larger disk without reinstalling Windows, applications and drivers. Clone entire disk to another disk and ensure that the contents of the source disk and the destination disk are exactly the same. Clone a partition completely to the specified location on the current disk or another disk and ensure that the data will not be changed. File Backup & Restore Back up specified files(folders) instead of the entire drive to another location to protect your data, so you can quickly restore files(folders) from the backup image files when needed. Incremental/Differential/Full Backup Different backup modes are supported, you can flexibly choose data protection schemes, which can improve backup performance and save storage space while ensuring data security. Delta Restore Delta restore uses advanced delta detection technology to check the changed blocks on the destination drive and restore only the changed blocks, so it has a faster restore speed than the traditional full restore. Universal Restore This feature can help us restore the Windows operating system to computers with different hardware and ensure that Windows can work normally without any hardware compatibility issues. Hasleo Backup Suite 5.8.2.2 changelog: Improved creation of bootable media that supports the UEFI CA 2023 certificate Fixed an issue that caused system restore to fail Fixed an issue where file backup could not list drives under Windows ARM64 Fixed an issue that caused backup of MacOS files/folders shared via Samba to fail Fixed an issue that caused "Smart Backup" to not work properly Fixed other minor bugs Download: Hasleo Backup Suite 5.8.2.2 | 39.7 MB (Freeware) Links: Hasleo Backup Suite Website | Hasleo Backup Suite Guide | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Shotcut 26.6.25 by Razvan Serea Shotcut is a free, open source, cross-platform video editor for Windows, Mac and Linux. Major features include support for a wide range of formats; no import required meaning native timeline editing; Blackmagic Design support for input and preview monitoring; and resolution support to 4k. Editing Features Trimming on source clip player or timeline with ripple option Append, insert, overwrite, lift, and ripple delete editing on the timeline 3-point editing Hide, mute, and lock track controls Multitrack timeline with thumbnails and waveforms Unlimited undo and redo for playlist edits including a history view Create, play, edit, save, load, encode, and stream MLT XML projects (with auto-save) Save and load trimmed clip as MLT XML file Load and play complex MLT XML file as a clip Drag-n-drop files from file manager Scrubbing and transport control Video Effects Video compositing across video tracks HTML5 (sans audio and video) as video source and filters 3-way (shadows, mids, highlights) color wheels for color correction and grading Eye dropper tool to pick neutral color for white balancing Deinterlacing Auto-rotate Fade in/out audio and fade video from and to black with easy-to-use fader controls on timeline Video wipe transitions: bar, barn door, box, clock (radial), diagonal, iris, matrix, and custom gradient image Track compositing/blending modes: Over, Add, Saturate, Multiply, Screen, Overlay, Darken, Dodge, Burn, Hard Light, Soft Light, Difference, Exclusion, HSL Hue, HSL Saturation, HSL Color, HSL Luminosity. Video Filters: Alpha Channel: Adjust, Alpha Channel: View, Blur, Brightness, Chroma Key: Advanced, Chroma Key: Simple, Contrast, Color Grading, Crop, Diffusion, Glow, Invert Colors, Key Spill: Advanced, Key Spill: Simple, Mirror, Old Film: Dust, Old Film: Grain, Old Film: Projector, Old Film: Scratches, Old Film: Technocolor, Opacity, Rotate, Rutt-Etra-Izer, Saturation, Sepia Tone, Sharpen, Size and Position, Stabilize, Text, Vignette, Wave, White Balance Speed effect for audio/video clips Hardware Support Blackmagic Design SDI and HDMI for input and preview monitoring Leap Motion for jog/shuttle control Webcam capture Audio capture to system audio card Capture (record) SDI, HDMI, webcam (V4L2), JACK audio, PulseAudio, IP stream, X11 screen, and Windows DirectShow devices Multi-core parallel image processing (when not using GPU and frame-dropping is disabled) DeckLink SDI keyer output OpenGL GPU-based image processing with 16-bit floating point linear per color component Shotcut 26.6.25 changelog highlights: Added basic support for OpenFX (OFX) video plugins. Added VST2 audio plugin support for third-party audio effects. Added Safe Mode to launch Shotcut without external plugins for easier crash recovery. Added an experimental plugin UI generator (--experimental) for supported filters and plugins. Added a new Noise Reduction audio filter powered by RNNoise. Added HDR export support. Added PQ HDR metadata options for HDR exports. Added the ability to view HDR previews in full-screen mode. Improved Vulkan display support on Linux. Fixed DeckLink and UltraStudio external monitor deadlocks. Fixed Opus audio export warnings related to frame_duration. Improved plugin discovery and compatibility for supported OpenFX and VST2 plugins. Expanded command-line options for testing experimental features. Improved overall application stability when using third-party plugins. Enhanced HDR editing and preview workflow. Included numerous bug fixes, performance optimizations, and general stability improvements throughout the application.[full release notes] Download: Shotcut 26.6.25 | Portable | ARM64 ~200.0 MB (Open Source) View: Shotcut Home Page | Other Operating Systems | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • I looked into a few echo devices to find they were riddled with adverts over time. No thanks ill stick to my homeassistant, smart plugs, smart bulbs and cameras that don't cost me a monthly fee and are cheaper to buy. No adverts also.
    • Brave Browser 1.91.180 is out.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Woland13 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Woland13 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Year In
      bernmeister earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      tuben earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      504
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      229
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      163
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      77
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!