This views the divine as a celestial vending machine. Through "Prosperity Gospel" or rigid legalism, the brainstorm becomes a contract: "If I do X, God must provide Y."
On the flip side, the "brainstorm" represents the creative, mystical side of faith. It is the human attempt to touch the "Numinous"—the terrifying and fascinating mystery of existence. These brainstorms lead to the great leaps in human ethics and art. When the conception of God shifts from a vengeful judge to a source of universal "Logos" or unconditional love, it represents a cognitive evolution. We aren't just thinking about God; we are expanding the boundaries of what it means to be human. The Paradox of Conception
The term "perversion" in this context doesn't necessarily mean something illicit; rather, it refers to the perverting or twisting of a concept away from its original or ideal state. Throughout history, the conception of God has been frequently hijacked to serve human ego or political power: Conceiving God: Perversions and Brainstorms; A ...
The ultimate tension lies in the fact that to "conceive" of something infinite using a finite brain is, by definition, a failed brainstorm. Every concept we create is a "perversion" because it is a reduction. As the philosopher Xenophanes famously noted, if horses had hands and could draw, they would draw their gods looking like horses.
At its most basic level, "conceiving God" is a cognitive brainstorm. Neurologists have often noted that when people contemplate the divine, the parts of the brain associated with self-reflection and social interaction—the medial prefrontal cortex—light up. In a very literal sense, our brainstorms about God are often mirror images of our own values, fears, and social structures. We project a "Super-Self" onto the canvas of the universe to make sense of the chaos. The "Perversions" of the Divine Image This views the divine as a celestial vending machine
The phrase "Conceiving God: Perversions and Brainstorms" suggests a provocative look at how the human mind constructs, distorts, and reimagines the divine. To explore this, we have to look at the intersection of psychology, neurobiology, and theology. The Architect in the Gray Matter
Ultimately, "Conceiving God" is a cycle of building a mental model (the brainstorm) and then realizing its limitations (the perversion). It is a process of "un-knowing"—breaking the old images to find something deeper beneath the brainstorm. These brainstorms lead to the great leaps in
Psychoanalysts might argue that an obsession with a punishing God is often a perversion of human guilt or a desire to see one's enemies suffer, externalized into a divine mandate. The Brainstorm as Revelation