Before psychology, and still concurrent with it, the need to help people with their behavior-change endeavors, mental health concerns, and other problems in living was met by the world’s great religions. For many people religions still serve this purpose, often outside the Western scientific view that considers them unfalsifiable and therefore irrelevant. This scientific myopia means that psychology has a limited perspective on behavior-change practices of religious derivation -- since the time of William James's Varieties of Religious Experience , religion hasn't been considered a respectable area of study. (Interestingly, we have better data about non-Western practices like yoga and meditation, which have been studied in ways cut off from their religious origins. It is mainly Christianity that was seen as outside the purview of scientific comment). One traditional practice common to many religions is the pilgrimage , a journey from home to a distant location in order to view...
My most recent blog post suggested that we aren't going to be able to upload human consciousness to the cloud anytime soon, for various reasons that have to do with the technical differences between human and AI information processing, and the physical differences between computers and human brains. So what about a simpler task, reading people's minds? That's another common trope of fantasy and sci-fi literature, and it seems close to recent advances in the mental control of prosthetic devices . The Neuralink company has also reported successes in this area, along with some ability for people with communication impairments to generate words or phrases on a computer. This seems like it is getting close to reading people's thoughts. Let's leave aside the medical challenges of implanting electrodes in the brain, which are considerable: metal needles can damage sensitive brain tissue, so the body treats the electrode as an injury and attempts to build scar tissue aroun...