Metanexus: Views. 2002.09.16. 2388 words"Drafting science to the cause of supporting a supernatural belief system is
a tricky business from the outset," remarks Jeff Dahms, in his review of
'The Link Between Religion and Health. Psychoneuroimmunology and the Faith
Factor', edited by Harold G Koenig and Harvey Jay Cohen (272 pages, Oxford
University Press; ISBN: 0195143604, February 2002).
"For the overwhelming bulk of scientists," he observes, "many of whom are
theists themselves, science is grounded in methodological naturalism.
Science looks completely askance at explanations that have a miracle in the
fifteenth line. It could be otherwise of course. We might convene a kind of
international summit of scientific organizations and vote on whether to
include supernatural explanation in scientific accounts. This is not going
to happen in the absence of completely overwhelming evidence of its
necessity as it would rend forever the coherence of explanation as we now
know it. Those who would propose that we do just this have every right of
course to make the case. But it needs to be done explicitly and completely
forthrightly rather than obliquely and under the disguise of a regular
scientific agenda as mostly happens at the moment."
And yet, Dahms notes:
"Into this milieu ride Koenig and Cohen. Both men are widely experienced
physicians in their own right. In their many professional roles they are
also members of the scientific staff of the Center for the Study of
Religion/Spirituality and Health at Duke University. They have edited and
written contributory chapters in a marvelous and very useful book. Many
skills were brought to the endeavour from their respective distinguished
careers in medicine, but it is the clarity of their understanding of the
overarching issues in the field that strikes one first. And the book can be
read by the most committed of naturalists (such as this reviewer) without
their hearts skipping a beat. It is a strictly empirical account of the
correlations between religious activity and health outcomes and the putative
psychophysiological mechanisms. Supernatural explanation is completely
eschewed in considering the processes involved. Whether this is a temporary
suspension of belief or the native position of the authors is not made
clear. Nonetheless to the great benefit of the reader the exposition is
cleanly of one kind."
Scroll down to find out more about Link Between Religion and Health.
Today's columnist, Jeff Dahms, is a physician-surgeon and research scientist
associated with Sydney University's teaching hospitals and who works
intermittently in primary care in the developing countries of Asia and the
Americas. His scientific interests are in mind/brain evolution and the
philosophy of science, particularly in the fundamental areas of physics and
biology, and in relational areas such as the science religion discussion.
-- Stacey E. Ake
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Subject: Religion & Health, Koenig & Cohen, and the Faith Factor
From: Jeff W. Dahms
Email: <jwdahms@wisdoc.net>
A Review of 'The Link Between Religion and Health. Psychoneuroimmunology and
the Faith Factor' Edited by Harold G Koenig and Harvey Jay Cohen
With some trepidation I recently started reading 'The Link Between Religion
and Health. Psychoneuroimmunology and the Faith Factor' edited by Harold G
Koenig and Harvey Jay Cohen. Religion and health has been getting a lot of
press in the last few years and the general quality of the discussion has
been very poor. It seems that whenever there is a strong emotional and a
priori belief element involved in an area, systematic coherent evaluation is
replaced by vague wishful thinking. Witness the perennial US cultural
debacle of the evolution/creation debate. Here is the problem.
Some 90-95% of the US population confesses to being theists of some variety,
and a large fraction of these have a traditional supernatural underpinning
to their faith. In this world of 'Sunday in the pews', supernatural
intervention in the natural causal order is a routine part of the scheme of
things. God and other higher beings are understood to intervene in human
affairs on their own initiative and in response to prayer - frequently.
With the move in recent years for science and religion to accommodate each
other at least in some intellectual quarters, dealing with these
supernatural assumptions of religion has been a major headache for those
committed to the endeavor. One solution that has major support is a strongly
interactive/melding vision of science and religion generating attempts at
scientific religion and religious science.
There has been a flood of writing and research of hugely variable quality
purporting to map the supernatural efficacy of prayer and the benefits of a
religious life in ensuring health, prosperity and success. Sometimes the
reference to the supernatural basis of this is explicit but more often it is
simply implied. Accounts of studies of the religion/health correlation will
include reference to 'natural' mechanisms but broadly hint that there is
something 'extra' going on. This is a very unfortunate practice and smacks
of intellectual hustling rather than honest thought.
Drafting science to the cause of supporting a supernatural belief system is
a tricky business from the outset. For the overwhelming bulk of scientists,
many of whom are theists themselves, science is grounded in methodological
naturalism. Science looks completely askance at explanations that have a
miracle in the fifteenth line. It could be otherwise of course. We might
convene a kind of international summit of scientific organizations and vote
on whether to include supernatural explanation in scientific accounts. This
is not going to happen in the absence of completely overwhelming evidence of
its necessity as it would rend forever the coherence of explanation as we
now know it. Those who would propose that we do just this have every right
of course to make the case. But, it needs to be done explicitly and
completely forthrightly rather than obliquely and under the disguise of a
regular scientific agenda as mostly happens at the moment.
Into this milieu ride Koenig and Cohen. Both men are widely experienced
physicians in their own right. In their many professional roles they are
also members of the scientific staff of the Center for the Study of
Religion/Spirituality and Health at Duke University. They have edited and
written contributory chapters in a marvelous and very useful book. Many
skills were brought to the endeavour from their respective distinguished
careers in medicine, but it is the clarity of their understanding of the
overarching issues in the field that strikes one first. And the book can be
read by the most committed of naturalists (such as this reviewer) without
their hearts skipping a beat. It is a strictly empirical account of the
correlations between religious activity and health outcomes and the putative
psychophysiological mechanisms. Supernatural explanation is completely
eschewed in considering the processes involved. Whether this is a temporary
suspension of belief or the native position of the authors is not made
clear. Nonetheless to the great benefit of the reader the exposition is
cleanly of one kind.
Koenig, Cohen and their chapter authors cover all the expected territory and
much more. They begin with introductory chapters on psychoneuroimunology
(PNI) and religion and the history of PNI. There are eight chapters devoted
explicitly to stress and the issues of cancer, autoimmune disease,
susceptibility to infection, wound healing and HIV/AIDS, Three chapters are
devoted to the specifics of Eastern and Western religious traditions and the
implications of the PNI/religion connection for society and culture. Finally
two chapters are devoted to the specifics of physiological and religious
research measures and avenues for future research. The technical material
assumes a considerable degree of biomedical literacy although there is some
grading of the physiological explanations. Less technical readers should not
be put off by this, as it is possible to get a good sense of the explanation
by skimming the more difficult tracts.
The book is largely a weaving together of two topics
* PNI in general and its relation to health
And
* Religion as a special case of PNI in action
Detailed accounts and helpful line diagrams very well illustrate the many
interacting mechanisms involved in PNI. Readers who skim these sections will
take away a sense of the marvelous subtlety and intricacy of the systems
involved. Numerous studies are quoted outlining the relationship between
various aspects of religious life and multiple measures of morbidity and
mortality. The many religious measures include everything from church
attendance to the depth of profession of belief whilst the health measures
range from mortality measures to psychological satisfaction scales. The
authors consider the possibility of course that some third factor may be
involved as the explanation in what are almost all correlational studies.
Perhaps certain psychological features predispose both to religious belief
and to the behaviors that enhance health outcomes.
The psychological mediators in religion's influence on health are suggested
to be
* Altered cognitive appraisal of negative experience lowering stress levels
* Religious community social support that buffers against stress
* Religious fellowship and a reinforced psyche that can substitute for the
health risks in alcohol, tobacco and other drugs
The very detailed account of PNI psychophysiology pathology and immunology
and the voluminous collation of studies linking various aspects of religion
and health are the main strengths of the book - and they are very
impressive.
The comments that follow relate to the kinds of questions that arise from
this work if we accept its central thesis rather than any perceived
inadequacies in what is a huge volume of information in a relatively slim
text.
Psychosomatic medicine is a large and relatively mature field. It would be
hard to find anyone medically informed who did not have at least some
appreciation of the vast body of research that connects psyche and soma both
positively and negatively. Religious belief and group affiliation is
particular strong element of psychological life for many so it is completely
unsurprising that it probably has the health correlations ascribed (Both
positive and negative of course). The many studies cited mat be soft and of
course open to the usual criticisms but the underling conclusion I suspect
is unproblematic. Many interesting issues arise if we accept the conclusions
of the book and move along to the wider questions that arise. For instance,
is there something special about religious belief and religious group
affiliation that distinguishes it from other powerful positive beliefs and
group support mechanisms? That is, does it have some particular edge in the
psyche/soma stakes? Surely this would be interesting to investigate.
Studies in the USA that consider this might have a particular design
problem. Because of the very high degree of religious belief in the US
versus other nations in the developed world it is difficult to get good
matching control groups. Non-believers in the US tend to come from special
subgroups rather than being smoothly distributed across the population. As
an extreme example the National Academy of Sciences has almost the reverse
of the belief distribution of the population (some 95% do not believe in a
personal God), but they are hardly a useful control group. Comparisons to
other developed countries with very much lower rates of religious belief
like those in Europe are possible but these bring their own design
difficulties.
Which religious systems get better health outcomes and what are the critical
psychological features that give particular health benefits? How do these
religious groups compare in terms of their health benefits to non-religious
belief systems and social groups? In the words of the authors, 'Determining
which aspect of immune functioning relate specifically to which aspects of
religion will be critically important.' Does the religious community want to
go down this track not knowing where it will lead and agreeing to accept the
conclusions whatever they may be? There is always a catch in cutting a deal
with the devil - in this case the scientific method. What if it turns out
that some lesser particularly authoritarian sect can demonstrate the best
health indices instead of our favorite mainstream church? What if joining
rotary and being a devoted jazz lover is the ultimate prescription for
health?
And what about these health indices?
For example, a religion of greed or exploitation (or in the more usual
dilute form, just not really giving a damn) may very well increase ones
longevity even though it's at the expense of others. The strongest predictor
of health is poverty and a religion that reinforces the socioeconomic power
differential raises the health standard for those with the relative power.
My religion may be very good for my health but very bad for the health of
others.
Moreover, what is to be done about the vast bulk of believers whose
philosophic calculus includes routine supernatural intervention in our
affairs? Is a 100% successful account of the PNI axes and health an
undercutting perspective? It would be ironic if the two authors were to end
up contributing to creeping naturalism.
Furthermore, how fine-grained one can get with religious notions that must
necessarily be operational? What meaning do descriptions like 'degree of
spirituality' have?
We can construct operational measures like 'attends church X times a week'
or self rates his/her spirituality on a ten point scale. Then degree of
spirituality means whatever it is that we are measuring, rather like the
meaning of IQ for example. Anything but the most general measures of
religious parameters risks becoming an exercise in counting archangels on
pinheads.
The authors suggest that the discoveries about the relationship between PNI
and health might be a substantial boon to a health system that is very
expensive and inequitable. Were it even possible to in some way dispense the
benefits of the religion health relationship, it strikes me as a very
curious religion that would accept the inequity of the system as an
implacable given.
Koenig and Cohen have edited and authored a supremely worthy text. It is
comprehensive enough in some sections to serve as a primary medical resource
yet is still largely accessible to an audience with a working knowledge of
biology. Their thesis that religion is a major determinant of psychosocial
life in America and therefore a potent driver of the PNI axes seems very
well supported. It certainly accords with the general literature in the
field of psychosomatic medicine. Having been given us this robust starting
point in considering religion and health even more interesting questions
await us.
We should look forward to further contributions from the Koenig/Cohen team.
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