Something There: The Biology of the Human Spirit
|
| List Price: | CDN$ 20.75 |
| Price: | CDN$ 17.91 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $39. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 7 to 10 days
Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca
Product Description
Like Hardy, Hay believes spirituality is “prior to religion and is a built-in, biologically structured dimension of the lives of all members of the human species.” Spirituality has a biological context, Hay contends, through which religion can rise, but does not necessarily do so. To evaluate this hypothesis, he examines a lengthy research procedure in the 1990s and excerpts from a poll in which ordinary people talk about how they try to make sense of their spiritual lives.
The findings conclusively show that, regardless of cultural influences and variations in beliefs about traditional religion, the most common phenomenon is an all-pervasive sense of “something there.” He points to evidence that spiritual awareness is rooted in our physiological make-up. He argues that this awareness is the underpinning of ethics, thus ignoring or repressing spirituality has damaging effects on Western society. He notes the current upsurge of interest in spirituality which he sees as “both a symptom of the malaise and an opportunity to begin the reconstruction of a humane moral commonwealth.”
Hay uses the results of his research to consider ways of overcoming the negative image of the institution of religion. He sees recovery of contemplative prayer as one of the most important tasks of the church. He concludes that most people are already deeply interested in the search for ultimate meaning and long “to repudiate our alienation from our human essence and to rebuild a relationship with the Creator. . . . This amounts to the prying open of a cultural valve long choked up, but never quite closed, because at some level people have always known that there is ‘something there.’”
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #377267 in Books
- Published on: 2007-03-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 336 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Hay is an academic cousin to Richard Dawkins—they both studied with zoologist and sociological observer of religion Alister Hardy. But at a time when the quasi-scientific atheist screed is increasingly popular, Hay's work tends in the other direction. Statistics prove that religious observance is down, but surprisingly, Hay can marshal other figures to show that spiritual experience is on the upswing. And this is all to the good for Hay, who feels that although the religious skepticism birthed in the Enlightenment had undoubted benefits (like modern science), it has also caused great harm. This is an ambitious book, covering biology, zoology, history of religions, philosophy, theology, politics and social science. Not many books quote both scientific journals and original sociological field research between the same covers. Specialists in these areas may feel shortchanged, but even they will learn something: Hay's interviews with avowedly nonreligious persons in Nottingham often yield heartrendingly beautiful stories about how wretched the church can be, but how interesting the life of the spirit is. The only problem is that church folks already know this. Readers from Dawkins's branch of the Hardy academic tree will likely see this as more evidence of how much religious "delusion" remains to be overcome. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
About the Author
