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More Meditation and Brain Scan News

April 30th, 2005 | Comments | Posted in Spirituality
1093 people have read this post.

Scans of Monks’ Brains Show Meditation Alters Structure, Functioning

November 5, 2004; Page B1, Wall Street Journal

 By SHARON BEGLEY

All of the Dalai Lama’s guests peered intently at the brain scan projected
onto screens at either end of the room, but what different guests they were.

On one side sat five neuroscientists, united in their belief that physical
processes in the brain can explain all the wonders of the mind, without appeal
to anything spiritual or nonphysical.

Facing them sat dozens of Tibetan Buddhist monks in burgundy-and-saffron
robes, convinced that one round-faced young man in their midst is the
reincarnation of one of the Dalai Lama’s late teachers, that another is the
reincarnation of a 12th-century monk, and that the entity we call "mind" is not,
as neuroscience says, just a manifestation of the brain.

It was not, in other words, your typical science meeting.

But although the Buddhists and scientists who met for five days last month in
the Dalai Lama’s home in Dharamsala, India, had different views on the little
matters of reincarnation and the relationship of mind to brain, they set them
aside in the interest of a shared goal. They had come together in the shadows of
the Himalayas to discuss one of the hottest topics in brain science:
neuroplasticity.

The term refers to the brain’s recently discovered ability to change its
structure and function, in particular by expanding or strengthening circuits
that are used and by shrinking or weakening those that are rarely engaged. In
its short history, the science of neuroplasticity has mostly documented brain
changes that reflect physical experience and input from the outside world. In
pianists who play many arpeggios, for instance, brain regions that control the
index finger and middle finger become fused, apparently because when one finger
hits a key in one of these fast-tempo movements, the other does so almost
simultaneously, fooling the brain into thinking the two fingers are one. As a
result of the fused brain regions, the pianist can no longer move those fingers
independently of one another.

Lately, however, scientists have begun to wonder whether the brain can change
in response to purely internal, mental signals. That’s where the Buddhists come
in. Their centuries-old tradition of meditation offers a real-life experiment in
the power of those will-o’-the-wisps, thoughts, to alter the physical matter of
the brain.

"Of all the concepts in modern neuroscience, it is neuroplasticity that has
the greatest potential for meaningful interaction with Buddhism," says
neuroscientist Richard Davidson of the University of Wisconsin, Madison. The
Dalai Lama agreed, and he encouraged monks to donate (temporarily) their brains
to science.

The result was the scans that Prof. Davidson projected in Dharamsala. They
compared brain activity in volunteers who were novice meditators to that of
Buddhist monks who had spent more than 10,000 hours in meditation. The task was
to practice "compassion" meditation, generating a feeling of loving kindness
toward all beings.

"We tried to generate a mental state in which compassion permeates the whole
mind with no other thoughts," says Matthieu Ricard, a Buddhist monk at Shechen
Monastery in Katmandu, Nepal, who holds a Ph.D. in genetics.

In a striking difference between novices and monks, the latter showed a
dramatic increase in high-frequency brain activity called gamma waves during
compassion meditation. Thought to be the signature of neuronal activity that
knits together far-flung brain circuits, gamma waves underlie higher mental
activity such as consciousness. The novice meditators "showed a slight increase
in gamma activity, but most monks showed extremely large increases of a sort
that has never been reported before in the neuroscience literature," says Prof.
Davidson, suggesting that mental training can bring the brain to a greater level
of consciousness.

Using the brain scan called functional magnetic resonance imaging, the
scientists pinpointed regions that were active during compassion meditation. In
almost every case, the enhanced activity was greater in the monks’ brains than
the novices’. Activity in the left prefrontal cortex (the seat of positive
emotions such as happiness) swamped activity in the right prefrontal (site of
negative emotions and anxiety), something never before seen from purely mental
activity. A sprawling circuit that switches on at the sight of suffering also
showed greater activity in the monks. So did regions responsible for planned
movement, as if the monks’ brains were itching to go to the aid of those in
distress.

"It feels like a total readiness to act, to help," recalled Mr. Ricard.

The study will be published next week in Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences. "We can’t rule out the possibility that there was a pre-existing
difference in brain function between monks and novices," says Prof. Davidson,
"but the fact that monks with the most hours of meditation showed the greatest
brain changes gives us confidence that the changes are actually produced by
mental training."

That opens up the tantalizing possibility that the brain, like the rest of
the body, can be altered intentionally. Just as aerobics sculpt the muscles, so
mental training sculpts the gray matter in ways scientists are only beginning to
fathom.

Words to Live By

April 30th, 2005 | Comments | Posted in Spirituality
834 people have read this post.

Do not believe in what you have heard.

Do not believe in tradition just because it is handed down over many generations.

Do not believe in anything just because it has been spoken many times.

Do not believe just because written statements come from some old sage.

Do not believe in conjecture.

Do not believe in authority or teachers or elders.

But after careful observation and analysis, when it agrees with reason and it will benefit one and all, then accept it and live by it.

– The Buddha

More Theses

April 26th, 2005 | Comments | Posted in Academic, Daily Life
581 people have read this post.

I'm finding many more theses relevant to religion when I go digging back a
few years. Roughly 70 total in the program. Here are some of the more
interesting (to me) ones.

Title: Satanism and Anton Szandor LaVey: An antithesis of Christianity

Author: Bandorf, George Andrew
Subject: PHILOSOPHY (0422); RELIGION, PHILOSOPHY OF (0322); THEOLOGY (0469);
BIOGRAPHY (0304)
Abstract: A systematic study of the satanic philosophy and religion initially
presented to the American public by Anton Szandor LaVey in the mid-nineteen
sixties and which has been built upon since that era of American cultural
revolutionism. Explication of LaVey's satanic philosophy via a careful
examination of his original writings is the focus leading to the conclusions:
(1) The true intent of Satanism is to meet the human need for ritual, fantasy,
and enchantment, while contemporaneously offering a rational set of beliefs upon
which humans can base their lives. (2) LaVey is decidedly irreverent to the
Judeo-Christian traditions largely because he considers these traditions
outdated, useless, and fostering dependence. (3) LaVey developed his own system
of beliefs and magical rituals based on ancient pagan and occult practices. He
is speaking to the demonic side of human nature which we as a species have long
been conditioned to ignore.

Title: Philosophy, core beliefs, and practices of ancient Latvian religion

Author: Renouf-Brisco, Heidi Leigh
Subject: HISTORY, ANCIENT (0579); RELIGION, HISTORY OF (0320); LANGUAGE, ANCIENT
(0289)
Abstract: All three of the Baltic States were slow to join the Christian
movement that commenced in the thirteenth century by the Teutonic Knights. These
countries of present-day Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania retained their original
native religions far into the medieval period. Although Latvian ancient religion
was banished by the fifteenth century, many peasants continued to practice their
pre-Christian worship. Much of the antediluvian tradition was passed on through
generations via folksongs, while other pieces of the Latvian early religion have
yet to be compiled. This study will make use of primary and secondary sources
pertaining to Latvia. This study will include research regarding the historical
background of Latvia, the religious history therein, the philosophy of its
ancient belief system, and also its core beliefs. The conclusions will
demonstrate the influence of Latvian early native religion upon the present day
society of Latvia.

Title: The role of intermediaries
Author: Graziano, Ann L.
Subject: PHILOSOPHY (0422); RELIGION, PHILOSOPHY OF (0322); PSYCHOLOGY, GENERAL
(0621)
Abstract: The mythology surrounding who will act as an intermediary between
humankind and God has varied depending on the needs of society. Even so, there
have been shared characteristics that lend themselves to an interpretation of
the intermediary as a universal phenomenon. Using various literature from four
main areas of studies, this paper will explain the origins of the intermediary,
determine the purpose that they serve in society now as well as in the past and
discuss the relevance of the intermediary in today's world. The areas of study
will be (1) mythology, (2) religion, (3) philosophy, and (4) psychology. The
conclusion will summarize the results of these studies as well as offer some
opinions as to what the future holds for the intermediary.

Title: Greek philosophical thought and its essential unity and synthesis
with Eastern ideas

Author: Butler, John, III
Subject: PHILOSOPHY (0422); THEOLOGY (0469); RELIGION, HISTORY OF (0320)
Abstract: This thesis is a treatise that argues the comparative analysis of
ideas, and the apparent cross-cultural, philosophical parallelism between the
two seemingly distinct cultures of the Greeks and the Indians. To support our
hypothesis, we have excerpted and researched the books of prominent scholars and
authors, spanning the fields of anthropology, linguistics, history, religion,
philosophy, and literature. Our methodological view is basically the same as
that of historians who do not ascribe to the 'great man theory,' but instead
hold fast to the view of 'determinism,' which theorizes that history is a record
of a predetermined goal in which interruptions may occur with unforeseen
detours, and an ultimate foreordained result. In other words, our viewpoint is
that there is a natural, cyclic progression that has and will inevitably
continue to bring the aforementioned cultures together philosophically into one
coherent whole.

Title: The philosophy and practice of yoga
Author: Bonassin, Vicki Gail Solochek
Subject: PHILOSOPHY (0422); RELIGION, PHILOSOPHY OF (0322)
Abstract: The purpose of this project is to explore yoga in terms of its
function. The problem exists within yoga's classification. I will define and
explain why yoga should ideally be considered a philosophy instead of a religion
or exercise. The significance of this project is that many individuals who might
otherwise benefit from yoga shy away from it because they believe it to be some
weird religion. While yoga does have roots in Hinduism and Buddhism, my basic
premise is: yoga is a philosophy of religion, possessing a physical basis. In
accordance, one can be any religion or no religion in order to practice yoga.
Though yoga can be approached as a religion if so desired, there will be major
comparisons of difference cited between other religions and yoga as proof that
yoga has more of a philosophical base to it than a religious one.