Literature DB >> 8795874

How prayer heals: a theoretical model.

J S Levin1.   

Abstract

This article presents a theoretical model that outlines various possible explanations for the healing effects of prayer. Four classes of mechanisms are defined on the basis of whether healing has naturalistic or supernatural origins and whether it operates locally or nonlocally. Through this framework, most of the currently proposed hypotheses for understanding absent healing and other related phenomena-hypotheses that invoke such concepts as subtle energy, psi, consciousness, morphic fields, and extended mind-are shown to be no less naturalistic than the Newtonian, mechanistic forces of allopathic biomedicine so often derided for their materialism. In proposing that prayer may heal through nonlocal means according to mechanisms and theories proposed by the new physics, Dossey is almost alone among medical scholars in suggesting the possible limitations and inadequacies of hypotheses based on energies, forces, and fields. Yet even such nonlocal effects can be conceived of as naturalistic; that is, they are explained by physical laws that may be unbelievable or unfamiliar to most physicians but that are nonetheless becoming recognized as operant laws of the natural universe. The concept of the supernatural, however, is something altogether different, and is, by definition, outside of or beyond nature. Herein may reside an either wholly or partly transcendent Creator-God who is believed by many to heal through means that transcend the laws of the created universe, both its local and nonlocal elements, and that are thus inherently inaccessible to and unknowable by science. Such an explanation for the effects of prayer merits consideration and, despite its unprovability by medical science, should not be dismissed out of hand.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1996        PMID: 8795874

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Altern Ther Health Med        ISSN: 1078-6791            Impact factor:   1.305


  9 in total

1.  Miracles and the limits of medical knowledge.

Authors:  William E Stempsey
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2002

2.  Science, medicine, and intercessory prayer.

Authors:  Richard P Sloan; Rajasekhar Ramakrishnan
Journal:  Perspect Biol Med       Date:  2006       Impact factor: 1.416

Review 3.  "And let us make us a name": reflections on the future of the religion and health field.

Authors:  Jeff Levin
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2009-03-17

4.  Restoring the spiritual: reflections on arrogance and myopia-allopathic and holistic.

Authors:  Jeff Levin
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2009-12

5.  Prevalence and Religious Predictors of Healing Prayer Use in the USA: Findings from the Baylor Religion Survey.

Authors:  Jeff Levin
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2016-08

6.  How prayer works.

Authors:  Amlan Kusum Jana
Journal:  Indian J Psychiatry       Date:  2011-01       Impact factor: 1.759

7.  Five dimensions of faith and spiritually of older African American women transitioning out of homelessness.

Authors:  Olivia G M Washington; David P Moxley; Lois Garriott; Jennifer P Weinberger
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2008-09-16

8.  Older home-care patients' preferred approaches to depression care: a pilot study.

Authors:  Denise C Fyffe; Ellen L Brown; Jo Anne Sirey; Elizabeth G Hill; Martha L Bruce
Journal:  J Gerontol Nurs       Date:  2008-08       Impact factor: 1.254

9.  A pilot study of faith healers' views on evil eye, jinn possession, and magic in the kingdom of saudi arabia.

Authors:  Tariq A Al-Habeeb
Journal:  J Family Community Med       Date:  2003-09
  9 in total

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