Re: Religion Thread: That's Me In the Corner...
I saw God at Jazz Fest in New Orleans in 1996. Is that a recognized phenomenon?
Well for one, case reports are very common in the medical literature and do not make "the publication a laughingstock." A case report commonly contains a hypothesis or...as I am sure you would describe it..."swearing on a cause." Case reports are more for generating hypotheses than testing them however they can be useful for rare or complex cases where further study is impractical.
The article was published in a medical journal called Epilepsy and Behavior. It has a modest impact factor of 2.26 although neurology journals typically are not high impact even at the top tier level. The thing I find more surprising is that nothing presented is a surprise. This phenomenon is well understood, formally taught during residency, and tested on boards. In fact, the first line of the publication states "Religious experiences have long been documented in patients with epilepsy" In fact, transcranial magnetic stimulation can evoke these type of experiences in subjects not suffering from epilepsy when particular areas of the brain are stimulated. There is actually repeatable differences of the experience based on the subject's beliefs.
I saw God at Jazz Fest in New Orleans in 1996. Is that a recognized phenomenon?