Scientific support for Patristic Theology

Patristic theology, and traditional teachings of Orthodoxy from the Church fathers of apostolic times to the present. All forum Rules apply. No polemics. No heated discussions. No name-calling.


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away
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Joined: Tue 23 September 2003 1:14 am

Scientific support for Patristic Theology

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I found this article that is very interesting. It is about experiments conducted for the purpose of refining the advertising technique. What seems to be going on here is that a link has been found, on a material level, between greed, avarice (or the desire for possesions) and self-esteem. This is what the holy Fathers said also. They said that the root of all the passions is self-love. After this comes the three main passions, gluttony, self-esteem and avarice. Self-love is the major dogma of our modern way of life. The maintainence of this system of "world" we live in is clearly the three major passions of gluttony, self-esteem and avarice. they are the main leverage used against us in advertising and media once the first one, self-love, has been established.

Of course, we know all these things are true because they are the teaching of the Church and we learn them through our struggles. I just thought it was interesting and worth noting that science is reaching the same conclusion based on a purely materialist type of investigation.

an excerpt:

"When Peter Graser underwent an MRI scan at Emory University, doctors weren't looking for disease.

Instead, brain researchers flashed images -- Madonna, broccoli, sushi, a Ford truck, a golden retriever, Bill Clinton, Coca-Cola -- before the 37-year-old Marietta resident's eyes as he lay inside the coffin-like tube of the magnetic resonance imaging machine.

The scientists discovered a biological clue to what drives consumers: Whenever Graser and a dozen other study volunteers saw a picture they particularly liked, their brains showed increased activity in the medial prefrontal cortex -- an area associated with preference, or sense of self.

On this Super Bowl Sunday, when advertising swells to a fever pitch, the researchers' conclusion is especially appropos: What really makes us loyal purchasers is a brand that reflects our self-image, not a product's taste, size, color or convenience."

Check the full article out here -

http://www.ajc.com/business/content/bus ... brain.html

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