Apr 15, 2022
In this fascinating episode, Dr. Michael Ferguson joins LDF host Dan Wotherspoon for a journey into the field of neuroscience and how its insights relate to spirituality and spiritual journeys. Michael is pioneering the new field of "neurospirituality", and now teaches courses on it at Harvard Divinity School and Harvard College, along with an appointment in neurophysiology at Harvard Medical School, where he is conducting several research projects. As you will learn from listening in on this conversation, he is eminently qualified to unpack for us what he is learning and hoping to continue to learn from this fascinating intersection.
In addition to getting to know Michael personally through his
sharing about his own journey toward making these studies his
primary focus, he also shares openly about his experiences within
Mormonism as a gay man, including the effects of conversion therapy
treatments. We also get a great glimpse of his own deep
spirituality.
In their wide-ranging discussion, Michael and Dan discuss the
nature of spirituality and what the brain is doing while someone is
experiencing a peak spiritual experience. Michael differentiates
between spiritual "states" and spiritual "traits," which is a theme
that plays out in several sections and that holds great promise for
not only understanding more about the reasons some people seem to
experience more intense spiritual states, but also about subtleties
between different states and his hopes to study various practices
associated with these differences and how they map in the brain so
he and his colleagues might be able to use the maps associated with
depression and other neuro- and psychological symptoms in an effort
to find ones that seem to affect the same areas in hopes of
tailoring certain practices to affect these places in a positive
way. Michael also shares his interest in a particular spiritual
trait that he calls "spiritual acceptance," which describes the
levels of openness individuals have to allowing that there is
perhaps more going on in the wider universe than what our brains,
logic, and language can describe.
Along the way, Michael introduces what the brain is revealing about
how deeply wired spiritual pathways are, which brings to light the
question of how spiritual experiences may have influenced brain
development and vice versa. He and Dan also discuss mysticism and
spiritual writings that describe various subtleties along a deep
spiritual path that seem to match well with what neuroscience is
discovering. For instance, part of their discussion focuses on the
poem, “The Dark Night of the Soul,” by St. John of the Cross, which
has suggested a metaphor for one stage along a spiritual journey,
as well as descriptions of the inner life as one moves toward God
from Teresa of Avila, an influential sixteenth-century nun with a
gift for describing the subtleties of various spiritual states.
There are parallels in what she writes to what neuroscience is
starting to understand.
This is a very inadequate introduction to this two-part episode.
May is still serve to whet your appetite for a great listening and
spiritual adventure. Don't miss out!