Rumi's devotional love as both a theological reality and a cascade of neurochemical states—oxytocin, dopamine, and serotonin—that bind the soul to the Divine.
For Rumi, love is not sentiment but the fundamental force binding creation to Creator. Modern neuroscience reveals that profound love experiences activate neurochemical pathways: oxytocin deepens bonding, dopamine drives longing and pursuit, serotonin stabilizes contentment in union. Rumi's poetry of ecstatic devotion describes precisely these states, yet understood theologically as direct encounter with Divine presence. When the Sufi lover experiences the 'intoxication' of proximity to God, neurochemistry and theology are not competing explanations but complementary lenses on the same reality. The devotional life cultivates these neural pathways deliberately through practice—dhikr (remembrance), meditation, and passionate prayer rewire the brain toward sustained connection with the transcendent. This framework dissolves the false divide between material neurobiology and spiritual meaning.
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