An accessible and well-written synthesis of the implications of cognitive neuroscience for the study of religion, this volume focuses on the experience of wonder in four major contexts... --Diane Jonte-Pace, Santa Clara University, Religious Studies Review
Successfully alluring readers into rapt interest, Bulkeley guides them through an introduction to cognitive neuroscience and evolutionary psychology. His command of the literature and ease of expression make it possible for the novice to learn, discover, and ponder with him. -- David T. Gortner, Church Divinity School of the Pacific, Anglican Theological Review
This book is a masterwork of scholarly integration with a fascinating theory of wonder as a source of spiritual growth. It also provides us with many examples of gracefully respecting the contributions of scholars whose own work is painfully contemptuous of others. - Patricia M. Davis, Pastoral Psychology, December 2006
An accessible and well-written synthesis of the implications of cognitive neuroscience for the study of religion, this volume focuses on the experience of wonder in four major contexts... --Diane Jonte-Pace, Santa Clara University, Religious Studies Review
Successfully alluring readers into rapt interest, Bulkeley guides them through an introduction to cognitive neuroscience and evolutionary psychology. His command of the literature and ease of expression make it possible for the novice to learn, discover, and ponder with him. -- David T. Gortner, Church Divinity School of the Pacific, Anglican Theological Review
This book is a masterwork of scholarly integration with a fascinating theory of wonder as a source of spiritual growth. It also provides us with many examples of gracefully respecting the contributions of scholars whose own work is painfully contemptuous of others. - Patricia M. Davis, Pastoral Psychology, December 2006
'The Wondering Brain should achieve its aim of spurring conversation. It teaches enough for people to enter into discussion, includes very helpful illustrations of the brain and perceptual processes, and takes on tough questions about wonders such as war that are neither pleasant nor beautiful.' - Sandra Lee Dixon, University of Denver
Kelly Bulkeley teaches at the Graduate Theological Union and John F. Kennedy University, both in the San Francisco Bay area. Former president of the Association for the Study of Dreams, he is the author of several books.