Is it reasonable to live a religiously oriented life, or is such a
life the height of irrationality? Has neuroscience shown that
religious experiences are akin to delusions, or might neuroscience
actually support the validity of such experiences? In_ Living
Religion_ James W. Jones offers a new approach to understanding
religion after the Decade of the Brain. The modern tendency to
separate theory from practice gives rise to a number of dilemmas for
those who think seriously about religion. Claims about God, the world,
and the nature and destiny of the human spirit have been ripped from
their context in religious practice and treated as doctrinal
abstractions to be justified or refuted in isolation from the living
religious life that is their natural home. Jones argues that trends in
contemporary psychology, especially an emphasis on embodiment and
relationality, can help the thoughtful religious person return theory
to practice, thereby opening up new avenues of religious knowing and
new ways of supporting the commitment to a religiously lived life.
This embodied-relational model offers new ways of understanding our
capacity to transform and transcend our ordinary awareness and shows
that it can be meaningful and reasonable to speak of a "spiritual
sense."The brain's complexity, integration, and openness, and the many
ways embodiment influences our understanding of ourselves and the
world, all significantly impact our thinking about religious
understanding. When linked to contemporary neuroscientific theories,
the long-standing tradition of a spiritual sense is brought up to date
and deployed in support of the argument of this book that reason is on
the side of those who choose a religiously lived life.
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Embodiment, Theology, and the Possibility of a Spiritual Sense
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780190927400
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter