# Neuroaesthetics confirms what Christianity has always known **By:** Delphine Chui **Published:** 2026-07-06T13:00:00.000Z **Source:** [The Catholic Herald](https://thecatholicherald.com/article/neuroaesthetics-confirms-what-christianity-has-always-known) --- More Related share More than a century ago, architect Lluís Domènech i Montaner designed a hospital around a question that few architects were asking: what if healing was not only about medicine? At a time when hospitals were becoming increasingly industrial and utilitarian, he insisted that patients deserved not only treatment, but beauty. The spaces we inhabit, he recognised, shape the way we feel, think and heal. So, when he designed Hospital de Sant Pau in Barcelona, he did not create a machine for healthcare; he created an environment for healing. The hospital was divided into pavilions surrounded by gardens, ensuring patients had access to fresh air, natural light and views of nature. Stained glass, mosaics, sculptures and intricate details were woven into the architecture itself, not as decoration, but as part of the experience. Today, this idea has a remarkably modern term: neuroaesthetics, the emerging field of research that explores how our brains respond to beauty, colour, pattern, texture and the built environment around us, with studies increasingly suggesting that our surroundings influence our stress, mood, attention and wellbeing. Rather than being acknowledged as essential to human flourishing, beauty is often regarded as subjective, decorative or even indulgent – a pleasing accessory to be pursued only after material and practical concerns have been addressed. And while contemporary society may relegate beauty to an aesthetic luxury subordinate to utility, efficiency and function, the Catholic tradition offers a fundamentally different vision. Instead of a superfluous embellishment, we understand beauty as one of the transcendentals of being, inseparably united with truth (verum) and goodness (bonum). Beauty is therefore not merely a matter of taste or sensory pleasure, but an objective dimension of reality itself, possessing an ontological significance that discloses reality as it truly is, drawing us beyond the merely useful towards a contemplation that can awaken a desire for communion with the divine source from whom all beauty ultimately proceeds. This understanding is reflected throughout the life of the Church; one need only step inside a great cathedral to see it: the soaring ceilings, stained glass windows, sacred music and intricate craftsmanship are not there because Christianity values extravagance; they exist because we are not merely rational creatures who process information, we are embodied souls whose sensory experiences reach places argument cannot. Pope Benedict XVI frequently spoke about the evangelising power of beauty. He observed that authentic beauty wounds us in a positive sense, piercing our complacency and awakening our longing for something greater. Many converts, as I can testify, are drawn in this way. It was not a theological argument that first opened my heart to faith, but beauty: Gregorian chant, The Calling of Saint Matthew by Caravaggio, and the traditional liturgy. Perhaps this is why beauty often appears at moments of restoration throughout the scriptures. The Garden of Eden is described not simply as functional but as beautiful; the Temple is adorned with artistic splendour; and the heavenly Jerusalem in the Book of Revelation is portrayed in imagery rich with jewels, light and glory. Today, many of us spend our days surrounded by harsh lighting, grey buildings, digital noise and environments that were never designed with beauty in mind. We readily accept that unhealthy food damages our physical health. Why, then, are we so reluctant to recognise that the environments we inhabit also affect our emotional, psychological and spiritual wellbeing? This is where Domènech’s hospital feels surprisingly prophetic. His insight was that healing is about more than treating symptoms, and that recovery involves not only the body but also the mind, emotions and, ultimately, the soul. Although designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997, the hospital sadly no longer fulfils the purpose for which it was created. Since 2009, it has served as a museum and cultural centre, while healthcare has moved to the modern Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, designed around efficiency, patient care and medical technology. Perhaps the greatest lesson of Hospital de Sant Pau is not architectural but cultural. Modern medicine has advanced immeasurably, yet in our pursuit of efficiency we have often relegated beauty to the margins. And in doing so, we risk forgetting that beauty is not the opposite of function, but one of its highest expressions. Continue reading with a free account Create a free account to read up to five articles each month Already have an account? Sign in » You have # free articles remaining this month. Subscribe to get unlimited access. Already have an account? Sign in » subscribe to the catholic herald today Our best content is exclusively available to our subscribers. Subscribe today and gain instant access to expert analysis, in-depth articles, and thought-provoking insights—anytime, anywhere. Don’t miss out on the conversations that matter most. Subscribe