Abstract
Neurotheology is the study of the neurobiological correlates of religious experiences. A key problem for this nascent field is that interpretations of religious experiences range from a regression to the oceanic oneness of the womb to supersensory apprehensions of transcendent realities. Identifying appropriate subjects is therefore problematic. Correlating the complex array of neurobiological data obtained from neuroimaging, genetic analysis and lab tests with such elusive “religious experiences” offers little hope of scientific rigor. This paper proposes a new approach. Mystical traditions have consistently described a “subtle anatomy” organized around a circuit running through the center of the spine that connects the human and the divine. If descriptions of this circuit are based on actual interoceptions, then it corresponds to a little-known, epigenetically suppressed structure that ensheathes the central axis of the central nervous system; Reissner’s fiber (RF). Rather than identifying subjects based on self-reporting and correlating their experiences with an array of neurobiological data, this new approach would regenerate the fiber, measure its activity and explore possible correlations with religious experiences.
Highlights
Devil According to Baudelaire Reissner’s fiber (RF) has been conserved along all the branches of the 550-million-year-old chordate phylogenetic tree from amphioxus to Homo sapiens and occupies the most strategic location in the central nervous system, it has been neglected by neuroscientists
RF has been conserved along all the branches of the 550-million-year-old chordate phylogenetic tree from amphioxus to Homo sapiens and occupies the most strategic location in the central nervous system, it has been neglected by neuroscientists
Attempting to establish a neuroanatomical basis for traditional acupuncture, Bonghan claims that substances injected into the acupuncture point corresponding to the central axis of the acupuncture anatomy travel along a network of ducts to Reissner’s fiber, which he renamed the “neural Bonghan duct.”
Summary
Devil According to Baudelaire RF has been conserved along all the branches of the 550-million-year-old chordate phylogenetic tree from amphioxus to Homo sapiens and occupies the most strategic location in the central nervous system, it has been neglected by neuroscientists. His neuroanatomical studies and behavioral experiments convinced him that the fiber is a novel, specialized pathway for the high-speed transmission of signals that Sargent’s hypothesis that RF is a novel pathway for the high-speed transmission of signals was generally accepted.
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