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http://webpages.charter.net/jspeyrer/lobe.htm

 

 

Neuro-Electromagnetic Fields

Osama bin Laden, and Regressive Psychotherapies

 

 

By John A. Speyrer

 

Q: What do UFO abductions, religious mysticism, out-of-body/ near-

death experiences,

and appearances of ghosts and demons have in common?

A: They all have been reproduced in the laboratory of Michael A.

Persinger, Ph.D.

 

 

". . . (I)t is not inconceivable that neurosis can be altered by

electronic probes which set off pains in ordered sequence. Certainly,

this is precisely what Primals do. Psychologically induced Primals

ultimately become electrically induced events in the nervous system.

Perhaps, someday, there will be a way to circumvent the psychological

stimulus and go straight to the areas of the brain which require

triggering."1 -- Dr. Arthur Janov

 

 

The scientific basis of primal therapy was established as far back as

1934 when one of neurosurgeon Wilder Penfield's patients was

undergoing brain surgery under local anaesthesia. During the

stimulation of her temporal lobe she informed him that she was re-

living an earlier experience in her life.

The patient reported that "she saw herself as she had been while

giving birth to her baby."2 In subsequent patients Dr. Penfield's

probe was able to elicit past events accompanied by feelings of fear,

loneliness, sadness, and terror. He was even to hear his patients

describe their out-of-body experiences.3 Penfield believed that these

episodes were the result of "electrical activations of the sequential

record of consciousness, a record that had been laid down during the

patient's earlier experience. The patient re-lived all that he had

been aware of in that earlier period of time as in a moving

picture "flashback."4 But, were these primal re-livings? Even though

the feelings may have been accompanied by much emotion, a primal is

more than a feeling - even more than a deep feeling.

In the early 1990s, another Canadian ex-compatriot U. S. citizen also

discovered that the temporal lobe held promise of unlocking some of

the secrets of the brain, but without invasive surgery.

Michael A. Persinger, a neuropsychologist at Laurentian University in

Sudbury, Ontario became interested in the origin of UFO sightings,

alien abduction scenarios and other such supposed occurrences. He

hypothesized that these paranormal events might have their origins in

electro-magnetic forces generated during the shifting of the earth's

tectonic plates. Such shiftings had long been known to be the cause

of earthquakes and volcanic activity. Persinger knew that much of the

brain's activity was electro-magnetic in nature and surmised that

tectonic activity could be inducing these delusions. According to

British biologist Rupert Sheldrake, dogs are able to sense those

morphic fields or energy patterns and know that an earthquake is

coming.

To either validate or disprove his theory, he rigged-up a motorcycle

helmet with electromagnets. These solenoids directed electro-magnetic

energy to specific parts of the subject's brain. Blindfolded and

relaxed, his subjects experienced material not unlike that which

Penfield's patients had felt over half a century earlier and proved

such energy fields could induce such subjectively felt paranormal

events. In addition to out-of-body experiences, and triggering of

various moods, feelings and memories, Dr. Persinger's subjects often

have spiritual and religious reactions triggered by the energy

fields.

It is these happenings, especially mystical feelings of being in the

presence of God, which have captured the interests and imaginations

of many. Persinger found that, by varying the frequency and intensity

of the electro-magnetic pulses, a unitive state with the universe

could be elicited as well as a sensed presence of God.

For most who learn about these effects, undoubtedly, the spiritual

results are the most interesting aspect of Persinger's work. The

implications in theology are obvious. Most of those who have a

religious background, even though not strong believers, immediately

name this perceived entity - God.

The sense which a person makes out of the experience depends on how

it is interpreted; and that interpretation is based on one's earlier

experiences. Thus, the perceived presence might be Allah instead of

the Christian God and the God image may be a symbol of a parent.

The themes of the material elicited by temporal lobe transients

reflect the early history of the experiencer. For that reason similar

feeling material which is common throughout all cultures is produced.

"Systemic access due to

1. . . . infantile memories of parental images (perhaps even

perinatal representations. . . ), and

2. . . . images from before four to five years of age and memories

for which there are no retrieval formats, could occur."5

There are "retrieval formats" for these and even earlier pre-birth

memories in the many regressive psychotherapies presently available.

For examples of such modalities, see on this website, Lagoy, Hollweg,

Maret, Janus, and Noble.

Persinger believes that both results would automatically be

attributed to sources outside of onesself. The former would be a

universal source of God images. The memories of parents would be

projected as "parent surrogates" upon God. A good parent predominant

image would equate to a conclusion that "God is good, merciful and

just, while memories of a bad parent would be "God is evil, punishing

and non-loving."

In regard to the "source of God images" see my supporting article, My

Mother As God, God As My Mother. Also see my review of Faith of the

Fatherless by Paul Viltz, Ph.D.

He writes that the other images, (item 2, above) ". . . would foster

conclusions of 'previous lives' or 'other memories.' . . . Both would

be attributed to extrinsic ("ego alien") sources."5

"We have systematically removed most of the illusions about

ourselves, such as being at the centre of the Universe," says

Persinger, who is not religious. "The last illusion, or delusion, is

that we are special creations who are looked after by someone in a

big-parent kind of way. The only way to verify this is by the

scientific method, and my research shows that religious experiences

are created by the brain. The experiences are real enough to the

person undergoing the experiment, but we are activating the areas of

the brain that produce the phenomenon."6

Serving as a ready explanation for the phenomena of mystical

experiences occurring in all religions, such sensory activations are

criticized and attacked by true believers and especially Christian

fundamentalists. Indeed, his facilities have been picketed by such

fundamentalists.

Persinger claims that, during the state of dreamy consciousness, up

to 80% of his subjects feel the presence of someone or something

sentient besides them. This effect has been termed the "Visitor

Experience." Some might sense this presence as God while others may

believe that they are in the presence of malevolent demons. During

this "floating state" early memories from childhood events can be

accessed. As in very deep therapeutic regressions, memories may

contain sensory inputs, such as observing visual color, hearing,

scents, feeling being touched, etc.

THE VISITOR EXPERIENCE‡

EMOTION FEELING

MOVEMENT FEELING

TINGLES NEW INSIGHT SMELLS VISION VOICE SOUNDS EPISODIC

VISION

 

 

EXTREME

NEGATIVE Terror,

Fear Falling Body seems to

burn or have

chills "I am worthless" Sulphur, stale

tobacco Seeing a

demon Words that

inspire fear Grinding

noises,

screams, etc. Tours of hell.

Negative

Near Death

Experiences

EXTREME

POSITIVE Bliss, Ecstacy Being uplifted 'Body Tingles' "I am

worthy of

unconditional love" Perfumes,

Incenses Seeing an

angel or

God Words of

salvation, healing, safety Ethereal Music Interacting with

God

‡ Source: Todd Murphy's The New Science of Spiritual Neurology.

(Website by member of Persinger's research group)

"Persinger speculates that our left temporal lobe maintains our sense

of self. When that region is stimulated but the right stays

quiescent, the left interprets this as a sensed presence, as the self

departing the body, or of God."7

But exactly how are these religious states produced? Our "sense of

self", says Persinger, "is maintained by the left hemisphere temporal

cortex. Under normal brain functioning this is matched by the

corresponding systems in the right hemisphere temporal cortex. When

these two systems becomes uncoordinated, such as during a temporal

lobe seizure or a transient event, the left hemisphere interprets the

uncoordinated activity as 'another self', or a 'sensed presence' thus

accounting for subjects' experiences of a 'presence' in the room.

Sometimes, it seems to be God, angels, demons, aliens, or ghosts.

Sometimes, one has a sense of leaving one's body, as in near-death

and in out-of-body experiences.

 

The Power of the God Experience

 

"In general, the more severe the disturbance, the more intense the

God Experience. . . .

The power of the God Experience shames any known therapy.

With a single burst in the temporal lobe, people find structure

and meaning in seconds. With it comes the personal conviction

of truth and the sense of self-selection."

-- Michael A. Persinger, Ph.D. Neuropsychological Bases

of God Beliefs, p.33 and 17

 

When the amygdala (the deep-seated region of the brain involved with

emotion) is involved in the transient events, emotional factors

significantly enhance the experience which, when connected to

spiritual themes, can be a powerful force for intense religious

feelings."8

However, when one has such experiences in a cold, clinical

laboratory, the psychological impact of the induced "presence" is

greatly reduced. The set and setting of the triggering experience is

of overwhelming importance for its self-interpreted context and can

even determine whether or not the experience occurs. This is akin to

the difficulty in having a primal feeling in such an environment.

Thus, having spiritual feelings in a religious location such as in a

church, mosque or even in one's home without the helmet and without

being hooked up to laboratory equipment, could easily convince the

experiencer that he is being favored with God's presence.

Having a far less intense experience, as one lives one's day-to-day

life, can have a much more intensely persuasive effect. This is what

happened to St. John of the Cross, St. Teresa of Avila, St. Thérèse

of Lisieux and all of the Christian and other religious mystics in

and out of convents and monasteries during periods of isolation and

prayer.

Such "God experiences" when combined with unitiveness have even

resulted in the martyrdom of some Islamic clerics (e.g., Hallaj in

the tenth century) for their claiming that they were one with God. In

the Catholic Church, Meister Eckhart's writings, for this reason,

were condemned as heretical by Pope John XXII.9

 

Osama bin Laden

 

"I was ordered to fight the people until they say

there is no God but Allah and his prophet Muhammad."

-- Osama bin Laden - in the Dec. 21, 2001 video

about the WTC terrorist attack

"Not surprisingly, their . . . behaviors and psychological

experiences are predominated by a sense of personal destiny, the most

supreme form of infantile egoism. Each one has been selected to give

a message to the world. Like the committed preacher or the

proselytizing prophet, they have a sense of the special - their

experiences are somehow exceptional."

-- Dr. Michael A. Persinger, Neuropsychological Bases of God Beliefs,

p. 20

 

A contemplative member of a religious order or a lay person can have

a God experience and easily become convinced that he or she is having

a spontaneous visit by God Himself and has been particularly chosen

by Him to accomplish great deeds. This was the origin of many of the

world's religions and of their charitable works - and perhaps,

unfortunately, may have also contributed to not a few religious wars

and terrorist pogroms. From whence comes the inspiration of Osama bin

Laden to lead, and of fellow fundamentalist Muslims to follow into

their personal suicidal rampages of terror?

In 1983, Dr. Persinger wrote about the serious implications which

could follow if temporal lobe transients are a source of religious

experiences. He feels that since the temporal lobes are also

associated with aggressive acts, such acts become imbued

with "personal meaningfulness" to the experiencer.

He asks,

". . . is there a genetic propensity to kill with the conviction of

cosmic consent following specific types of TLTs? Second, many acute

religious behaviors are correlated with opiate-like complacency,

helplessness, and the expectation of divine deliverance; how would

the decision-making patterns of people who occupy powerful political

positions be influenced by TLTs during the threat of self-

annihilation? Third, if TLTs are primarily biogenic neuropatterns,

they will be simulated ultimately, by modern technology. If they can

be evoked by artificial methods, what are the clinical implications

for the control of religious experiences?"10

Over a period of fifteen years Persinger included the following query

in a questionnaire given to university students: "Would you kill

someone if you were told to by God?" Consistently, about seven per

cent of the students said that they would. These were also the ones

who had responded with answers that placed them above average in

religiosity, that is, they attended religious services regularly and

took part in religious observances consistently. Seven per cent seems

like a small number, but a number large enough that, with cultish

indoctrination, could do much aggressive damage to enemies, both real

and imagined.11

 

* * *

Perhaps, there was always an inborn tendency - a susceptibility to

spiritual feeling, if you will, in the potential mystic. Compounded

with very early traumas, this inborn proclivity might come to

fruition. Persinger writes, "A variety of idiosyncratic factors

influence temporal lobe stability. They include birth traumas,

mechanical damage (concussions) during development, degenerative

diseases, hormonal fluctuations, and the development of scleroses."12

(My emphasis) See on this website, Childhood and Fantasies of

Medieval Mystics by Ralph Frenken, Ph.D., a German psychologist.

So prayer and meditation are not the only ways to access our God

consciousness. Knowledge that temporal lobe epileptics had this

tendency has been known for hundreds of years. It has also been found

to be more common in those experiencing serious injuries or illnesses

(e.g., St. Ignatius Loyola), having had automobile accidents,

enduring great fatigue and malnutrition, long isolation and

privation, and undergoing deep experiental psychotherapy.

These can all trigger those brain areas which universally dispose us

to having religious and spiritual experiences. Psychedelic drugs,

such as LSD and the Aztec's sacred mushrooms, also have the ability

to connect us with the God parts of our brains. See the Psychedelic

Section of the Primal Psychotherapy Page.

But, all this supposed evidence does not prove that God does not

exist. In a Maclean's article, Dr. Persinger is quoted as saying, "I

am interested in the part of the brain that mediates the God

experience." As far as believing that the God experience is actually

caused by God's presence, he admits, "It's a possibility."13

Although an atheist,

"(h)is research, Persinger said, showed that "religion is a property

of the brain, only the brain and has little to do with what's out

there." Those who believe the new science disproves the existence of

God say they are holding up a mirror to society about the destructive

power of religion. They say that religious wars, fanaticism and

intolerance spring from dogmatic beliefs that particular gods and

faiths are unique, rather than facets of universal brain chemistry."14

Sharon Begley, in her Newsweek cover story article, Religion and the

Brain, quotes Wheaton College psychologist David Wulff:

"Since we all have the brain circuits that mediate spiritual

experiences, probably most people have the capacity for having such

experiences. But, it is possible to foreclose that possibility. If

you are rational, controlled, and not prone to fantasy, you will

probably resist the experience."15 It is like resisting hypnosis -

you can willfully refuse to undergo the experiences or refuse to

place any confidence in the experiences you are having.

It is agreed by most that the temporal lobe is not where the material

is stored. However, stimulating those lobes allows for the release of

unconscious material to begin. Penfield believed that his results

only suggested ". . . that there is a scanning mechanism, in the

temporal cortex, that is capable of activating the thread of

facilitation at a distance."16 There are any number of sensory

elements of such feelings ( e.g., vision, touch and sense of smell,

etc. ) and access to a number of brain areas may be required to load

into consciousness the different stored elements of the original

experience.

 

"Against data, social opinion, and sometimes direct confrontation

that the experience was a lie,

people will still persist (in the) validity of their own

perceptions. . . . I cannot overemphasize the importance of the sense

of conviction produced by these experiences. Following these small

alterations in the temporal lobe, the person becomes convinced that

what he or she has experienced is absolutely right. No amount of

rational conversation or data can sway the opinion."

-- Dr. Michael A. Persinger, Neuropsychological Bases of God Beliefs,

p. 42, p. 25

 

 

Who Can Successfully Use the God Machine?

What typically are the personality factors which make one a good

candidate for the electro-magnetic helmet? For that matter, what kind

of person would have such experiences spontaneously? Surprisingly,

being easily hypnotized is one of the most significant factors which

would predict such success. Interestingly enough, the list of types

of persons or conditions which lend themselves to entering altered

states definitely includes those who are neurotic. This adds some

evidence that there is a relationship between the mystic state,

paranormal phenomena and neurosis.

In two internet articles, Todd Murphy, the developer of the Shakti

helmet, lists about fifty types of people and/or of behaviors which

show an ease of their entering into spiritual or altered states of

consciousness. A very high percentage of these factors also point to

those neurotics who would have relatively easy access to their

traumas in primal therapy or other regressive therapies, because of

incomplete defenses against their repressed pain.

Some of those listed by Murphy include, -- those who experience déjà

vu frequently, write poetry, feel the presence of spirits, often feel

that they are not alone, keep a diary or journal, have a history of

hallucinogenic/psychedelic drug use, are in menopause, have lots of

sex, have no sex at all, do bodywork, do vipassana meditation, have

kuldalini-type experiences (body tinglings, etc.), think often of

suicide, find that being in love is all consuming, were sexually or

physically abused as children, are homosexual, have anxiety attacks,

have an undue fear of death, and who fast frequently. All of these,

and others, find it easier to have spiritual feelings.17, 18

Thus, it would seem that there is a positive co-relation between

overt neurosis and ease of spiritual access. Is this ease of access

the direct result of the existence of the memories of repressed

trauma or rather a genetic inborn neuroanatomical proclivity? It

would be reasonable to assume that the production of material in

altered states of consciousnes is due to the interoperation of both

factors.

.. . . Australian researchers found that people who report mystical

and spiritual experiences tend to have unusually easy access to

subliminal consciousness. "In people whose unconscious thoughts tend

to break through into consciousness more readily, we find some

correlation with spiritual experiences," says psychologist Michael

Thalbourne of the University of Adelaide. Unfortunately, scientists

are pretty clueless about what allows subconscious thoughts to pop

into the consciousness of some people and not others.

The single strongest predictor of such experiences, however, is

something called "dissociation." In this state, different regions of

the brain disengage from others. "This theory, which explains

hypnotizability so well, might explain mystical states, too," says

Michael Shermer, director of the Skeptics Society, which debunks

paranormal phenomena. "Something really seems to be going on in the

brain, with some module dissociating from the rest of the cortex."19

Why do clients undergoing holotropic breathwork become more spiritual

the longer they are in therapy? Perhaps this means that as access to

one's unconsciousness increases, one's defenses against the contents

of repressed traumas become less rigid. Maybe the susceptibility to

the helmet's forces increases as the number and length of sessions

increases. What implications would this have to Janov's theories of

the association of spirituality with repressed trauma?

 

Possible Implications For The Regressive Therapies

The Persinger neuro-electromagnetic technique may force into

consciousness repressed material or perhaps symbolic representations

of such material. But, perhaps it will just cause an overload of the

repressed material which might be experienced as a transpersonal

event. Perhaps, the technique will only work for some - those who

already have easy access. Can and should this neuro-electromagnetic

technique be combined with a regressive therapy?

Perhaps there are good reasons why this particular technique should

not be used in psychotherapy. But since it brings up memories as well

as their associated feelings it would seem to be worthwhile to

investigate its applicabilities. What would happen if one used such a

device during a primal experience? With refinements, one day it may

be possible to access stored memory circuits during a particular

period of one's life. But, this may be just speculation as the

addition of this technique to regressive psychotherapy methodology

may prove to be useless.

Since spiritual feelings are an important element in the experience,

it may be helpful to compare the theoretical position of Arthur Janov

with that of Stanislav Grof who have diametrically opposed views of

the significance of spirituality in the regressive psychotherapies.

Dr. Grof and others have noticed that when a certain point is reached

in the holotropic breathwork process what becomes important for many

are issues of spirituality rather than the problem which first

brought them to therapy. He feels that spirituality is a normal step

of progression in deep regressive therapies. He emphasizes that, not

necessarily religion, but

"(s)pirituality in its genuine form is a legitimate and important

dimension of existence and it is incorrect to discount it as a

product of ignorance, superstition, primitive magical thinking, or

pathology. Mystical experiences should not be seen as indications of

mental disease, but as normal and highly desirable manifestations of

the human psyche that have extraordinary healing and transformative

potential."20

On the other hand, Dr. Janov believes that the presence of

spirituality is almost like proof that the client is defending

against deeper traumatic feelings. My understanding of his position

is that the presence of spirituality in one's life is a marker which

reveals that the person has unintegrated past trauma upon which his

spirituality is being projected and which serves as a defense against

this material becoming conscious. He believes that the deeper we

probe into our pain with connected primal feelings, the less

spiritual we will eventually become.

He writes,

"The notion of God is not only there to quell our Pains but to

fulfill our key, unfulfilled needs (to be listened to, protected,

watched over, loved, etc.). It is the notion that begins to produce

the endorphines that literally answer our prayers for surcease. The

idea of God is the real power, yet we imagine that the relief is the

workings of a deity. We ourselves bring on the relief by fiats of

faith and hope. Those two psychological factors arise out of Pain and

suppress it. The power is inside of us; positive belief has the power

to tranquilize."21

In spite of these two radically opposing viewpoints concerning

spirituality, could Persinger's technique be used to supplement or

expedite the therapeutic efficiency of different forms of regressive

psychotherapies? What would be the effect of having regression

therapy sessions under the stimulus of electro-magnetic energy

fields?

Of the two psychotherapies, Grof's holotropic breathwork, at least

theoretically, would seem better suited to incorporate such

techniques. Such stimulation of the brain during a holotropic

breathwork session might be similar to the therapeutic effects (the

regressions) triggered by evocative music and an over-oxygenated body

system.

One criticism in the comparison of holotropic breathwork with LSD

psychotherapy is that the former more typically does not elicit, as

readily as does LSD, such profound transpersonal material as, for

example, 'God experiences.' Since Grof feels that sometimes one's

access to experiental transpersonal material is needed to resolve a

present-day problem and since there are some who cannot access such

material readily, perhaps the introduction of electro-magnetic

therapy into the breathwork process might be useful. It may thereby

fill an important void left when all psychedelic drug use,

therapeutic and otherwise, was banned in the 1960s.

It is noted by many holotropic breathwork facilitators that clients

in primal therapy have a ready access to their modality. It seems to

them that the resolution of some traumas in primal therapy lowers

defenses and allows relatively easy access to their client's

repressed feelings. This includes access, in breathwork, to both

autobiographical material as well as transpersonal material, although

the latter is not typically accessed in primal therapy.

I have had only a few experiences in Grof's holotropic breathwork. My

first included a unitive experience with God the creator, although it

was soon replaced by an age six tonsillectomy traumatic re-living.

The God experience had been accessed primarily through the use of

deep breathing and music. Perhaps, Persinger's magic helmet, which is

touted to encourage such experiences, would lead to new and more

effective forms of regressive psychotherapy.

After my first experience in holotropic breathwork, I became

convinced that there was a close relationship between repressed

trauma and transpersonal experiences, such as unitive God feelings,

out-of-body experiences, near death experiences, alien abduction

scenes, prior lives, etc. This material being experienced must come

from somewhere. Perhaps, some are symbolic representations of earlier

repressed traumas. Time will tell. See my article From Primal Therapy

To Holotropic Breathwork .

* * *

This article began with the earlier musings of Arthur Janov about the

possibility of the future use of a type of electro-probe in primal

therapy. During the researching for this article, I found a source to

purchase such a device, although thankfully, like Persinger's device

it works non-invasively! It has the appearance of a retro-fitted

bicycle helmet.

I have ordered one from Todd Murphy. See The Spiritual Brain. I plan

to keep a journal and publish my experiences with the Shakti helmet

on the Primal Psychotherapy Page in A Journey With The Shakti

Neuromagnetic Helmet.

___________________________

 

 

 

 

 

REFERENCES

1Arthur Janov. The Anatomy of Mental Illness: The Scientific Basis of

Primal Therapy G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 1971, p. 83

2Wilder Penfield. The Role of the Temporal Cortex in Certain

Psychical Phenomena, The Journal of Mental Science, July, 1955, p. 451

3 Wilder Penfield, The Mystery of the Mind, 1975, Princeton

University Press, Princeton, NY, p. 21

4Wilder Penfield. op. cit., p. 458

5 Michael A. Persinger. Religious and Mystical Experiences as

Artifacts of Temporal Lobe Function: A General Hypothesis, Perceptual

and Motor Skills, 1983, 57.

6Quoted in The Times of London, Brain Storm by Anjana Ahuja, October

29, 2001 - http://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/0,,74-2001373571,00.html

7Newsweek, Mystic Vision or Brain Circuits At Work? - Religion and

the Brain, May 7, 2001, by Sharon Begley

8 Michael Shermer. How We Believe: The Search For God In the Age of

Science, 2000, p. 66 (Quoted at

http://star.arm.ac.uk/~mdm/Heretic/originof.htmhttp://star.arm.ac.uk/~

mdm/Heretic/originof.htm

9Persinger, op. cit., p. 1262.

10Wiseman, James A., To Be God With God: The Autotheistic Sayings of

the Mystics, Theological Studies, June, 1990.

11Buckman, Robert, M.D. Bloodshed, Belonging and the Need to Believe,

Queen's Quarterly, Kingston Canada, Spring, 2001, p. 31

12Persinger, op. cit., p. XX.

13Nichols, Mark, Maclean's, Secrets of the Brain, January 22, 1996

14Shankar Vedantam, Tracing the Synapses of Our Spirituality, The

Washington Post, June 17, 2001

15Newsweek. op. cit.

16 Wilder Penfield. quoted in Arthur Janov's The Anatomy of Mental

Illness: The Scientific Basis of Primal Therapy, p 66.

17 Todd Murphy. Spiritual Aptitude Test . From The Spiritual Brain

(Website)

18____________. The Earth Beneath Your Feet: Looking At Sacred Lands.

>From The Spiritual Brain (website).

19Newsweek. op. cit.

20 Stanislav Grof. The Future of Psychology - Conceptual Challenges

to Psychiatry, Psychology, and Psychotherapy (Internet article)

21 Arthur Janov. Imprints: The Lifelong Effects of The Birth

Experience, p. 197.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Internet information

Besides the two hundred plus professional articles and six books of

Dr. Michael A. Persinger, for additional information, I recommend the

following internet sources.

 At last! The real origin of "spiritual" experiences!

 A listing of some professional research articles by Michael

A.

Persinger dealing with geomagnetic influences:

http://www.debshome.com/Magnetic_Response.html

 Epilepsy: Sacred Disease by Paul Newman

 Mystic Visions or Brain Circuits At Work? by Sharon Begley,

Newsweek, May 7, 2001 (Many copies of this excellent article are

online, so if this link does not work run a search for a copy)

 Experiencing God: The Neurology of the Spiritual

Experience , by

Scott Bidstrup

 In Search of God, New Scientist Magazine, April 21, 2001

 Is God All In Our Heads? Michael Valpy, August 25, 2001

 Seized: Temporal Lobe Epilepsy As a Medical, Historical and

Artistic Phenomenon by Eve Plante, Book Review by Robert Finn

 Tracing the Synapses of Our Spirituality by Shankan

Vedantam,

Washington Post, June 17, 2001

 The Right Limbic Lobe and Associated Limbic Lobe Structures

As The=

 

Biological Interface With an Interconnected Universe, by Melvin

Morse, M.D. (This article, unfortunately, is no longer on the

internet.)

 The 2:00 a.m. Wow Chamber - Two Short Excerpts from a

Michael

Persinger book

 Zapped by Science, Again by Nicholas Regush

 

 

Other good general sources of Information:

 Buckman, Robert, M.D. Bloodshed, Belonging and the Need to

Believe=

,

Queen's Quarterly, Kingston Canada, Spring, 2001, pp 29-35

 Maccleans, The God Machine, January 22, 1996

 Free Inquiry, Noelle, David C., Searching For God In the

Machine, =

 

Summer, 1998, pp. 54-56

 Mandell, Arnold J., M.D., from The Psychobiology of

Consciousness,=

 

Chapter 14, Toward a Psychobiology of Transcendence: God in the

Brain, 1980

 Ramachandran, V.S., Blakeslee, Sandra, Phantoms In the

Brain:

Probing the Mysteries of the Human Mind, Quill William Morrow, 1998

 Sullivan, Andrew. This Is A Religous War, The New York

Times,

October 7, 2001

 

 

 

Articles and book reviews on the Primal Psychotherapy Page which

relate to mysticism:

 Mysticism and Psychedelics: The Case of the Dark Night by

Christopher M. Bache, Ph.D.

 A Reappraisal of Teresa of Avila's Supposed Hysteria by

Christophe=

r

M. Bache, Ph.D.

 Dark Night, Early Dawn by Christopher M. Bache, Ph.D. - Book

Revie=

w

 Psychosis, Mysticism, and Feelings by John A. Speyrer

 The Ecstatic Journey: The Transforming Power of Mystical

Experienc=

e

by Sophy Burnham - Book Review

 From Primal Therapy To Holotropic Breathwork by John A.

Speyrer

 Childhood and Fantasies of Medieval Mystics by Ralph

Frenken, Ph.D=

..

 The Stormy Search For The Self by Christina Grof and

Stanislav

Grof, M.D. - Book Review

 Beyond All Reason by Morag Coate - Book Review

 Strange Encounters: Near Death Experiences and Birth

Memories by

John A. Speyrer

 Beyond Death: The Gates of Consciousness by Stanislav and

Christin=

a

Grof - Book Review

 

On this website, also see:

Parents, The Image of God, and Mysticism: Reflections On Some

Writings of Michael A. Persinger, Ph.D.

Book Review - Neuropsychology of the Bases of God Experiences by

Michael A. Persinger

On the Origins of the Fear of Dying in the Writings of Michael A.

Persinger and Others

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