Iain McGilchrist’s hemispheric brain theory posits a dichotomy where the right hemisphere governs holistic, virtuous societal values, while the left hemisphere drives reductionist, mechanistic thinking. Scientific meta-analyses, however, refute these neurobiological foundations, characterizing his claims as myth rather than evidence. McGilchrist leverages scientific terminology as "decorative scholarship" to construct a teleological, process-theological worldview that resists empirical falsification. By framing the brain as a receiver for cosmic consciousness rather than a generator of it, he transitions from neuroscience to mysticism, eventually entertaining the existence of malign psychic entities and external influences on mental health. This rhetorical strategy allows him to insulate his metaphysical claims from rational critique, as he dismisses contradictory evidence as the product of a limited, left-brained perspective, ultimately prioritizing narrative resonance and theological intuition over verifiable scientific data.
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