Religion, Brain & Behavior
Vol. 1/3 2011
Editorial
Reductionism in the scientific study of religion
Wesley J. Wildman, Richard Sosis & Patrick McNamara
pp. 169-172
Original Articles
Glossolalia is associated with differences in biomarkers
of stress and arousal among Apostolic Pentecostals
Christopher Dana Lynn, Jason J. Paris, Cheryl Anne Frye
& Lawrence M. Schell
pp. 173-191
Target Article
The need to believe: a neuroscience account of religion
as a motivated process
Michael Inzlicht, Alexa M. Tullett & Marie Good
pp. 192-212
Commentaries
Religion, health, and the social signaling model of religion
Candace S. Alcorta
pp. 213-216
Believing, belonging, meaning, and religious coping
Roy F. Baumeister & Michael MacKenzie
pp. 216-219
Religion is the opiate of the masses
(but science is the methadone)
Jesse Lee Preston
pp. 231-233
Understanding the role of religion's palliative effects,
within and between cultures
Daniel Randles
pp. 234-236
The need to believe in conflicting propositions
Uffe Schjoedt & Joseph Bulbulia
Pages: 236-239
Religions, meaning making, and basic needs
Ann Taves & Raymond F. Paloutzian
pp. 239-241
From “is” to “ought”: the naturalistic fallacy
in the psychology of religion
Kees van den Bos
pp. 242-243
Response
Existential neuroscience: a proximate explanation of
religion as flexible meaning and palliative
Michael Inzlicht, Alexa M. Tullett & Marie Good
pp. 244-251
Book Review
Radical embodied cognitive science
Nathaniel F. Barrett
pp. 252-255
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