Massassi Forums Logo

This is the static archive of the Massassi Forums. The forums are closed indefinitely. Thanks for all the memories!

You can also download Super Old Archived Message Boards from when Massassi first started.

"View" counts are as of the day the forums were archived, and will no longer increase.

ForumsDiscussion Forum → Apple triggers 'religious' reaction in fans' brains
Apple triggers 'religious' reaction in fans' brains
2011-05-22, 6:38 PM #1
Quote:
(CNN) -- Next time Grandma asks why you're going to the mall on Sunday morning instead of church, tell her you're going to Apple Chapel.

For Apple fans, the brand triggers a reaction in the brain that's not unlike that of religious devotees, according to a BBC documentary series that cites neurological research.

The neuroscientists ran a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) test on an Apple fanatic and discovered that images of the technology company's gadgets lit up the same parts of the brain as images of a deity do for religious people, the report says.

The first episode of the documentary shows Apple employees "whipped up into some sort of crazy, evangelical frenzy" at the recent opening of an Apple store in London.

Observers and Apple critics have long accused fans of the tech company of taking their infatuation to an extreme.

People have gone to great lengths to prove their love of Apple with tattoos, bumper stickers and home shrines to outmoded Mac computers. Apple's cult-like following was highlighted in a 2009 documentary called "Macheads."

A blog, aptly titled Cult of Mac, wrote on Thursday about Oakland, California, resident Gary Allen's cross-country pilgrimage to Apple's first store in Virginia to celebrate the retail chain's 10th anniversary this week.

In speeches, Pope Benedict XVI has said technology consumption poses a threat to religion and the Roman Catholic church. The holy leader told a Palm Sunday crowd last month that technology cannot replace God.

However, apparently it may inspire god-like devotion.


http://www.cnn.com/2011/TECH/gaming.gadgets/05/19/apple.religion/index.html
2011-05-22, 6:50 PM #2
The most important word in the article is 'an.'

There was one test subject. I'm not very impressed.
"it is time to get a credit card to complete my financial independance" — Tibby, Aug. 2009
2011-05-22, 9:52 PM #3
Well I'm sure cognitive dissonance looks like something.
ᵗʰᵉᵇˢᵍ๒ᵍᵐᵃᶥᶫ∙ᶜᵒᵐ
ᴸᶥᵛᵉ ᴼᵑ ᴬᵈᵃᵐ
2011-05-22, 10:48 PM #4
im sure it would light that same area of the brain, much like listening to Rush for wookie... or looking at a picture of a certain someones mom for the rest of us... :ninja:

lol...i for got about the censor thing for freelancer...
Welcome to the douchebag club. We'd give you some cookies, but some douche ate all of them. -Rob
2011-05-22, 10:52 PM #5
I'm a technoathiest.
I love the future.
2011-05-23, 5:35 AM #6
ahaha macfags

really we could scan the brain of any fanatical retard, like that woman that cried when that new fast food place opened in texas the other week, and we would see the same thing. us atheists science guys already came to the conclusion that that whole religion thing was all in our heads. but no religious person is ever going to pay attention because their frame of mind is defaulted to faith and godliness existing as an entity outside of human consciousness. who knows how long the delusion will last with science to **** on everyones fun but its definitely finite.

sorry sweet benny, technology is already replacing religion. its going to be some asimov ****, yo.
2011-05-23, 5:57 AM #7
Jin does not care for capital letters.
nope.
2011-05-24, 5:42 PM #8
Maybe lack of capitalization triggers a religious experience in his head.
the idiot is the person who follows the idiot and your not following me your insulting me your following the path of a idiot so that makes you the idiot - LC Tusken
2011-05-24, 6:15 PM #9
Bahahahaha I love this. With one test subject, you can't place much scientific validity on this, but it's definitely something I've long suspected to be true :P
Fincham: Where are you going?
Me: I have no idea
Fincham: I meant where are you sitting. This wasn't an existential question.
2011-05-24, 6:31 PM #10
Just don't blame the study. It was probably picked up by the news and blown out of proportion. It may be the case that the emotions are widespread, but I seriously doubt that the original study claimed so based on one subject.
"Flowers and a landscape were the only attractions here. And so, as there was no good reason for coming, nobody came."
2011-05-24, 10:29 PM #11
$10 says the subject was a trendy hipster.

↑ Up to the top!