enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cutting_Through_Spiritual...

    Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism, by Chögyam Trungpa is a book addressing many common pitfalls of self-deception in seeking spirituality, which the author coins as Spiritual materialism. It is the transcript of two series of lectures given by Trungpa Rinpoche in 1970–71. [1] In Psychology Today Michael J. Formica writes,

  3. Neuroscience of religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuroscience_of_religion

    This study was presented as an abstract at a neuroscience conference and referenced in Ramachandran's book, Phantoms in the Brain, [26] which was not published as a peer-reviewed scientific article. Research by Mario Beauregard at the University of Montreal , using fMRI on Carmelite nuns, has purported to show that religious and spiritual ...

  4. Peter Huttenlocher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Huttenlocher

    This "pruning" mechanism removes redundant connections in the brain. Huttenlocher found that in individuals with intellectual disabilities, this mechanism works differently. [2] Huttenlocher also became an early authority on Reye's syndrome, and in 1987 launched the first clinic in the United States for children with tuberous sclerosis. [4]

  5. Rudolf Steiner's exercises for spiritual development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudolf_Steiner's_exercises...

    Rudolf Steiner developed exercises aimed at cultivating new cognitive faculties he believed would be appropriate to contemporary individual and cultural development. . According to Steiner's view of history, in earlier periods people were capable of direct spiritual perceptions, or clairvoyance, but not yet of rational thought; more recently, rationality has been developed at the cost of ...

  6. Zen and the Brain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zen_and_the_brain

    The publishers described their book as a "Comprehensive text on the evidence from neuroscience that helps to clarify which brain mechanisms underlie the subjective states of Zen, and employs Zen to 'illuminate' how the brain works in various states of consciousness". Austin starts with a discussion of Zen Buddhism, its goals, and practices.

  7. The Mind and the Brain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mind_and_the_Brain

    In this effort, the book cites past thinkers such as the Buddha and William James, and discusses research in the areas of neuroplasticity, mindfulness meditation and quantum physics, to support the concept of mental force as a force that can be developed and applied to exercise free will at the quantum level in the brain, to use the power of ...

  8. God helmet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_helmet

    The God Helmet was not specifically designed to elicit visions of God, [1] but to test several of Persinger's hypotheses about brain function. The first of these is the Vectorial Hemisphericity Hypothesis, [20] which proposes that the human sense of self has two components, one on each side of the brain, that ordinarily work together but in which the left hemisphere is usually dominant.

  9. Epiphenomenalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epiphenomenalism

    Epiphenomenalism is a position in the philosophy of mind on the mind–body problem.It holds that subjective mental events are completely dependent for their existence on corresponding physical and biochemical events within the human body, but do not themselves influence physical events.