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From the award-winning NPR religion correspondent comes a fascinating investigation of how science is seeking to answer the question that has puzzled humanity for generations: Can science explain God?
Is spiritual experience real or a delusion? Are there realities that we can experience but not easily measure? Does your consciousness depend entirely on your brain, or does it extend beyond? In Fingerprints of God, award-winning journalist Barbara Bradley Hagerty delves into the discoveries science is making about how faith and spirituality affect us physically and emotionally as it attempts to understand whether the ineffable place beyond this world can be rationally -even scientifically-explained.
Hagerty interviews some of the world's top scientists to describe what their groundbreaking research reveals about our human spiritual experience. From analyses of the brain functions of Buddhist monks and Carmelite nuns, to the possibilities of healing the sick through directed prayer, to what near-death experiences illuminate about the afterlife, Hagerty reaches beyond what we think we know to understand what happens to us when we believe in a higher power.
Paralleling the discoveries of science is Hagerty's own account of her spiritual evolution. Raised a Christian Scientist, she was a scrupulous adherent until a small moment as an adult triggered a revaluation of her beliefs, which in turn led her to a new way of thinking about God and faith.
An insightful examination of what science is learning about how and why we believe, Fingerprints of God is also a moving story of one person's search for a communion with a higher power and what she discovered onthat journey.
In another writer's hands, much of the material in this book might have become fodder for ridicule…But throughout the book, one is struck by the humility Hagerty brings to her subjectsomething lacking in many contemporary debates over the meaning of faith and the existence of Godand her skepticism about the science offered up as proof of spiritual experience…Hagerty's engaging book poses a provocative challenge to anyone who has ever wondered where faith comes from, and what it can do forand tous.
More Reviews and RecommendationsBarbara Bradley Hagerty is the award-winning religion correspondent for National Public Radio. She is the recipient of the Templeton-Cambridge Journalism Fellowship in Science and Religion, and a Knight Fellowship at Yale Law School. Before joining NPR, she was a reporter at The Christian Science Monitor for eleven years.
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November 21, 2009: The author's journalism credentials should be revoked. This is pure theism, and cloaking it with dribs and drabs of scientific opinion does not earn it any scientific authority whatsoever. It's dishonest philosophy; yet another lame attempt to drag God back into a universe where it doesn't exist. Don't waste your time!
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August 08, 2009: If you're planning to read this book in order to find scientific proof that there is a God, put it down. It's not that kind of a book. This book is more of an erudite summarion of personal anecdotes along with reports of what various researchers are discovering about what the human brain looks like in periods of prayer and meditation. Most of the researchers interviewed will tell you that these variations in brain patterns are not evidence that there is a God; rather, it's evidence of how the brain reacts or changes during periods of prayer.
What I found more interesting personally were the recurring themes among a variety of believers as they reported their experiences. It wasn't just that most of them experienced feelings of euphoria or that they encountered a white light of some kind; it was that they felt a fundamental change in their outlook because of their experiences. Additionally, each person -- no matter their religious persuasion (or lack thereof) -- described their spiritual encounters with a figure they would describe as God (as in creator and omniscient being, no matter what name they gave it) and were left with a sense that religious affiliation was an artificial construct (i.e., it didn't matter whether a person were Jewish or Christian or Hindu or agnostic -- all paths lead to the same place).In his book Spectrum, Dr. Dean Ornish urges meditation as a component of healthful living because it has been proven to reduce stress. Having read Fingerprints of God I am convinced that this is true. That it also opened up some new "visions" for my personal spiritual life is also helpful, but that's beside the point for the purposes of review because not everyone will find this book helpful in that regard.Barbara Bradley Hagerty writes clearly and with a gentle sense of humor, by the way. She brings her journalistic style of writing and sense of organization to the overall tale. It's a joy to read her writing.