Spiritual Evolution: A Scientific Defense of Faith | 
| Author: George Vaillant Publisher: Broadway Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $14.42 You Save: $10.53 (42%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 16240
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 256 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 9.4 x 6.3 x 1.1
ISBN: 0767926579 Dewey Decimal Number: 200.19 EAN: 9780767926577 ASIN: 0767926579
Publication Date: May 20, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new item. Over 3.5 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Order with confidence. Code: B20080904214033T
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Product Description
In our current era of holy terror, passionate faith has come to seem like a present danger. Writers such as Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, and Christopher Hitchens have been happy to throw the baby out with the bathwater and declare that the danger is in religion itself. God, Hitchens writes, is not great.
But man, according to George E. Vaillant, M.D., is great. In Spiritual Evolution, Dr. Vaillant lays out a brilliant defense not of organized religion but of man’s inherent spirituality. Our spirituality, he shows, resides in our uniquely human brain design and in our innate capacity for emotions like love, hope, joy, forgiveness, and compassion, which are selected for by evolution and located in a different part of the brain than dogmatic religious belief. Evolution has made us spiritual creatures over time, he argues, and we are destined to become even more so. Spiritual Evolution makes the scientific case for spirituality as a positive force in human evolution, and he predicts for our species an even more loving future.
Vaillant traces this positive force in three different kinds of “evolution”: the natural selection of genes over millennia, of course, but also the cultural evolution within recorded history of ideas about the value of human life, and the development of spirituality within the lifetime of each individual. For thirty-five years, Dr. Vaillant directed Harvard’s famous longitudinal study of adult development, which has followed hundreds of men over seven decades of life. The study has yielded important insights into human spirituality, and Dr. Vaillant has drawn on these and on a range of psychological research, behavioral studies, and neuroscience, and on history, anecdote, and quotation to produce a book that is at once a work of scientific argument and a lyrical meditation on what it means to be human.
Spiritual Evolution is a life’s work, and it will restore our belief in faith as an essential human striving.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
Science is finally catching up! September 1, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Harvard Psychiatrist George Vaillant has made a major contribution to the research into mental and emotional health with his findings published in this new book. I am quoting him in several papers I have just written on this new genre of expanding spirituality. Finally, we are taking the experience of spirituality out of the neocortex of the brain where we "talk" about it and into the limbic brain where we "feel" it. And, as Vaillant explains -- we do it with positive emotion -- compassion, love, forgiveness, awe, hope, faith/trust and gratitude. This is an intelligent read and great contribution! Barbara Harris Whitfield, author of The Power of Humility, and The Natural Soul (Sterlinghouse, 2009)
Pleasant read, but somewhat slow August 25, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Recommended by a friend of mine who heard the author's NPR interview, I purchased the book right away since I was really confused between being religious and spiritual. This book presented very satisfactory answers that you could be spiritually mature and full of positive emotions without submitting yourself to one particular religious community. Based on decades of adult study and research, the author has a lot to tell you about how positive emotions has been playing an important role in human evolution and an individual's life. However, the book seems somewhat slow and throws in many brain related terms that are kind of distracting. But, if this is the topic that's been bothering you deep inside, I strongly recommend it.
Spiritual Evolution: A Scientific Defense of Faith August 20, 2008 Excellant book on theories of spirituality. I puts light on the differances of religion, faith and spirituality.
Fashionable Ignorance July 19, 2008 1 out of 6 found this review helpful
The notion that the AA canon or chapters 2-11 of the book "Alcoholics Anonymous" represents a universal spirituality is not correct. This text refers to a "Higher Power" as an "all powerful" "Supreme Being" that "has all knowledge" and that "loves" you. This limits its philosophy to one based upon an Abrahamic God. Moreover, the phrase "He is the Father and We are his children" (page 62) and its notion of 12 steps implies an obeisance that is not consistent with the teachings of Buddha Siddhattha Gotama. The concept of turning one's will over to God originated with Saint Augustine. The Buddhist Theravada concept of Anatta implies that the self that one props up with a "Big Book" consistent Higher Power is an illusion.
The Amygdala meets Emily Dickinson - WONDERFUL BOOK! June 4, 2008 20 out of 22 found this review helpful
Here is what will happen to you when you read George Vaillant's Spiritual Evolution: * During the chapter "Joy," you may cry as you feel Joy. During the chapter "Love," you will want to call home to say Hi. * You will be pulled in by personal stories from the Study of Adult Development, and how these men have come around to positive emotions and spirituality. * You will be inside a colossal head fake - a situation in which you're learning but it seems like you're playing.
In Spiritual Evolution, Vaillant does something amazing: he makes the reader feel the emotion in the chapter about that emotion - Joy, Love, Compassion, Awe, and more. Imagine having a book in which you could reach for the emotion Joy just by opening that chapter again. This is the psychoanalyst at his best - he has bottled the emotions. Furthermore, he's bottled them by connecting your curiosity about how the mind works with your love for Emily Dickinson. It's the best kind of learning when it feels like play. Imagine having a book that you open up, and Vaillant on the other side says, "Let's play."
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