8 One of Eddy's sub-arguments should be noticed at this point. He asks (p. 478) what ‘information’ the transcendent input to religious experience supplies or could supply. But I have used the term ‘information’, not in the sense of ‘items of information’, but in its cybernetic sense, as any impact of our environment upon us. In the case of religious experience the ‘impact’ is the universal presence to us of the Real, or the Divine, as the ground of our being, and this comes to consciousness in the ways shown to us in the history of religions. (John Bowker was, so far as I know, the first to apply the cybernetic concept of information to religious awareness in The Sense of God (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1973).)Google Scholar