TM and Cult Mania

TM and Cult Mania is a non-fiction book that examines assertions made by the Transcendental Meditation movement (TM).[1] The book is authored by Michael Persinger, Normand Carrey and Lynn Suess[2] and published in 1980 by Christopher Publishing House.[2] Persinger is a neurophysiologist and has worked out of Laurentian University.[1] He trained as a psychologist and focused on the impacts of religious experience.[3] Carrey is a medical doctor who specialized in psychiatry.[4] He focused his studies into child psychiatry with research at Dalhousie University,[5] and has taught physicians in a psychiatry residency program in the field of family therapy.[4] Suess assisted Persinger in researching effects of geological phenomena on unidentified flying object sightings in Washington;[6] the two conducted similar research in Toronto and Ottawa.[7]

TM and Cult Mania
Book cover
AuthorMichael Persinger, Normand Carrey, Lynn Suess
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectTranscendental Meditation
GenrePsychology
PublisherChristopher Publishing House
Publication date
1980
Pages198
ISBN0-8158-0392-3
OCLC6582905
158/.9 19
LC ClassBF637.T68 P46

TM and Cult Mania analyzes the efficacy or lack thereof of the TM meditation process, concluding that it is, "no more effective than many other meditation techniques".[1] The authors write that, "Transcendental Meditation has achieved international recognition through commercial exploitation" and "poor scientific procedures".[8] The book notes that physiological changes observed due to partaking in TM methodology are very small.[9] Persinger, Carrey, and Suess conclude in TM and Cult Mania, "science has been used as a sham for propaganda by the TM movement."[1]

A positive capsule review in the Los Angeles Times noted that the authors use logic to point out transparencies in the assertions of Transcendental Meditation.[10] John Horgan, in his book Rational Mysticism, questions Persinger's neutrality and says that in his book he treats religious beliefs and spiritual practices as mental illness.[11]

Authors

Michael Persinger is a neurophysiologist who has worked at Laurentian University in Greater Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.[1] He trained as a psychologist and focused on the impacts of religious experience.[3] Persinger is the author of the book Neuropsychological Basis of Human Belief, and since its publication he has researched and examined the physiological and neurological causes of religious belief systems.[12] Normand Carrey received education as a medical doctor and specialized in psychiatry.[4] He became a child psychiatrist, and worked out of Dalhousie University in Halifax, Canada.[5] Carrey has conducted studies into psychological resilience,[13] and has taught physicians in a psychiatry residency program in the field of family therapy.[4] He has worked in the field of adolescent psychiatry at IWK Health Centre.[14] Lynn Suess assisted Persinger in 1980, in researching geological phenomena which may have affected unidentified flying object sightings in Washington.[6] Suess and Persinger performed similar research in Toronto and Ottawa.[7]

Contents

TM and Cult Mania takes a look at the assertions made by the Transcendental Meditation movement and analyzes them from a scientific perspective.[1] The book acknowledges that those who practice the Transcendental Meditation technique feel relaxed and experience an increase in creativity.[1] According to the book, the physiological effects reported by the scientific studies on Transcendental Meditation are relatively small from a scientific perspective and "no more effective than many other meditation techniques".[1] Transcendental Meditation is seen as most noteworthy due to its ability to manipulate stress and expectancy.[10]

"Transcendental Meditation has achieved international recognition through commercial exploitation" and "poor scientific procedures", write the authors.[8] The book notes, "Frankly, the reported effects of TM upon human behavior are trivial. Considering the alleged potency of the TM procedure, the changes in physiological and behavioral measures are conspicuously minute."[9] TM and Cult Mania comes to the conclusion that, "science has been used as a sham for propaganda by the TM movement."[1]

Reception

A capsule review of the book for the Los Angeles Times, Phil Freshman commented, "Using hard logic and crackling humor, a trio of Canadian laboratory researchers cogently deflates Transcendental Meditation; they spotlight transparencies in its claims and warn of its latent hazards to those in wobbly mental health."[10] In his book Rational Mysticism, author John Horgan comments that although Persinger says he's neutral toward religious belief, he's more biased than other neurotheologians and that his two books "cast religious belief and spiritual practices in a psychopathological light".[11]

gollark: I doubt it. There's presumably some intermediate encoding step going on.
gollark: If you have a video recorder program which does that, just take the output and mux out the video stream.
gollark: You can make Desmos draw π multiples on the axes?!
gollark: I can search through them easily enough.
gollark: Why? I have lots of RAM now.

See also

References

  1. Harvey, Bob (December 18, 1993). "Establishing Transcendental Meditation's identity; Few can agree if it's a religion, Hinduism or meditation". The Ottawa Citizen. p. C6.
  2. Jarrell, Howard R. (1985). International Meditation Bibliography, 1950–1982. United States: ATLA Bibliography Series. p. 209. ISBN 0-8108-1759-4.
  3. Brothers, Leslie (2002). Mistaken Identity: The Mind-Brain Problem Reconsidered. State University of New York Press. p. 56. ISBN 0-7914-5187-9.
  4. Brown, Catrina; Tod Augusta-Scott (2006). Narrative Therapy: Making Meaning, Making Lives. Sage Publications, Inc. p. 323. ISBN 1-4129-0988-0.
  5. Quigley, Ann (2007). Mental Health. Greenhaven. p. 86. ISBN 0-7377-2484-6.
  6. Reynolds, Nancy E. (November 26, 1908). "Ashford Sightings Involved – Scientist Has New Ufo Twist". The Dispatch. Pierce County, Washington. p. 1.
  7. Bobrow, Robert S. (2006). The Witch in the Waiting Room: A Physician Investigates Paranormal Phenomena in Medicine. Da Capo Press. pp. 228–229. ISBN 1-56025-814-4.
  8. Smith, Jr, MD, Ralph S. (October 2, 1991). "Maharishi Ayur-Veda". Journal of the American Medical Association. American Medical Association. 266 (13): 1773–1774. doi:10.1001/jama.1991.03470130045029. ISSN 0098-7484.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. Weldon, John (2004). "Transcendental Meditation in the New Millennium – Part Two: Does TM Really Work?". Christian Research Journal. Charlotte, North Carolina: Christian Research Institute. 27 (6): 2. JAT262‐2.
  10. Freshman, Phil (August 24, 1980). "Notable". Los Angeles Times. p. Q8.
  11. Horgan, John (2004). Rational Mysticism: Dispatches from the Border Between Science and Spirituality. Mariner Books. p. 95. ISBN 978-0-618-44663-6.
  12. Burguete, Maria; Lui Lam (2008). Science Matters: Humanities As Complex Systems. World Scientific Publishing Company. pp. 74–76. ISBN 981-283-593-8.
  13. Ungar, Michael; Linda Liebenberg (2008). Resilience in Action: Working with Youth Across Cultures and Contexts. Toronto, Ontario, Canada: University of Toronto Press. p. 111. ISBN 0-8020-9471-6.
  14. "Young people need more access to mental health services – volunteer". The Chronicle Herald. Halifax, Nova Scotia. March 11, 2009. p. B1.

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