Reshaping [Your] Reality. [1] A cognitive perspective of how religion changes the life-view with special consideration to traumatic events
Reshaping [Your] Reality. [1] A cognitive perspective of how religion changes the life-view with special consideration to traumatic events
Author(s): Tudor Cosmin Ciocan, Any Docu AxeleradSubject(s): Psychology, Sociology, Sociology of Religion, Psychology of Religion
Published by: EDIS- Publishing Institution of the University of Zilina
Keywords: religiousness; neurology; amygdala; mindfulness; brain; meditation; spiritual; psychology; awareness; core beliefs; solipsism; subjectivism; perception;
Summary/Abstract: Just as there are people who are born with certain sensory limits or altered sensitivity (+/-) and perceive the outside world differently, so there are several ‘stimuli’ that alter our subjective perception (+/-) of reality (re)giving a different/distorted image of it, the religious faith being one of those. This role is played, for example, by a strong emotional motivation: when someone who strongly believes that he resists fire [or mentally ignores this factor] to save his/her child becomes unaffected by fire in an extreme situation of ambition and elimination of logical reasons for self-preservation; or someone religiously strongly motivated on thinking that he is ‘divinely sent’ to identify and eliminate opponents of divine forces, will attempt all possible steps (violence, terrorism, genocide) to stop these factors, regardless of human ‘reality’ put into play. Therefore, we initiate a series of articles focusing on the dialogue between several domains for the same purpose: What are the factors involved in altering the image of reality, how is a mentally constructed the image of reality in the stages of psychic development, what are the ‘stimuli’ that can distort that image and who can ‘manipulate’ them, but also who can be the ‘correctors’ of these image distortions.
Journal: Dialogo
- Issue Year: 8/2022
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 34-43
- Page Count: 10
- Language: English