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OverviewIn recent years, a considerable body of evidence has been accumulating in both the physical and social sciences suggesting that our spiritual nature is real and not illusory, or that there is something there. This book provides an accessible inter-disciplinary study of recent scholarly work in human spirituality. Zoologist David Hay analyzes extensive research on contemporary attitudes drawn from surveys and polls; his investigative work with the late Oxford zoologist Alister Hardy, founder of the Religious Experience Research Unit; and more than thirty years of his own research experience. Evidence is presented in the context of Western cultural history, beginning with tracing a repression of spiritual awareness arising from the European Enlightenment view of God as the most remotely theoretical of all intellectual fantasies. 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 hasdamaging 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.' Full Product DetailsAuthor: David Hay, DrPublisher: Templeton Press Imprint: Templeton Press Dimensions: Width: 14.10cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 21.40cm Weight: 0.422kg ISBN: 9781599471143ISBN 10: 1599471140 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 01 March 2007 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviewsDavid Hay, zoologist by training, argues with powerful and persuasive data, that even in supposedly secularist and irreligious Britain, the human species possesses an openness to and even a need for spirituality and this because of a development in the evolutionary process. The book is a challenge to both the religious and to those who are not religious. -- Andrew Greeley Author InformationDavid Hay was previously director of the Religious Experience Research Unit at Oxford University, now known as the Religious Experience Research Centre, and is currently honorary senior research fellow in the department of divinity and religious studies at the University of Aberdeen. He is the author of many books and articles and the co-author with Rebecca Nye of The Spirit of the Child. He lives in Nottingham, England. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |