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Fascinating!

 What Your Brain Looks Like on Faith


URL to an article in Time
_http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1694723,00.html?cnn=yes_
(http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1694723,00.html?cnn=yes)

Article describes brain scans on how the brain processes belief.   Reminds 
me
of Sagan's Broca's Brain.

First few paragraphs
"Sam Harris is best known for his barn-burning 2004 attack on religion,  The
End of Faith, which spent 33 weeks on the New York Times  best-seller List.
The book's sequel, Letter to a Christian Nation also  came out in editions
totalling hundreds of thousands. Last Monday, however, the  combative 
Californian
produced a shorter (seven pages) and seemingly calmer  publication that will 
be
a hit if it reaches 10,000 readers: "Functional  Neuroimaging of Belief,
Disbelief and Uncertainty." It appears in the respected  journal Annals of
Neurology. And Harris, 40, claims it has little if any  connection to his 
two popular
books. Believers, however, may draw their own  conclusions — and may want to
read his subsequent neurological studies even more  carefully.




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The current paper recovers Harris's identity as a doctoral candidate in
neurology at UCLA, his occupation before he commenced what he calls his
"extramural affair jumping into trenches in the culture wars." It is an 
addition  to
the growing field of brain scan trials, and Harris thinks it may be the 
first
to detail how the brain processes belief. At first read, it seems less
dangerous  to Christianity than to another cherished pillar of Western 
thought — that
"objective" beliefs like "2 + 2 = 4" and "subjective" beliefs like "torture
is  bad" belong to entirely separate categories of thought.
Harris and two co-authors ran 360 statements by 14 adult subjects whose 
brain
 activities were then scanned by functional magnetic resonance imaging 
(fMRI)
 devices. It suggests that within the brain pan, at least, the distinction
between objective and subjective is not so clear-cut. Although more complex
assertions may get analyzed in so-called "higher" areas of the brain, all 
seem
to get their final stamp of "belief" or disbelief in "primitive" locales
traditionally associated with emotions or taste and odor. Even "2 + 2 = 4," 
on
some level, is a question of taste. Thus, the statement "that just doesn't 
smell
 right to me" may be more literal than we thought. "
Chris



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