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Postmaterial spiritual psychology posits that consciousness can contribute to the unfolding of material events and that the human brain can detect broad, non-material communications. In this regard, this emerging field of postmaterial psychology marks a stark departure from psychology's traditional assumptions about materialism, making this text particularly attractive to the current generation of students in psychology and related health and wellness disciplines. For the most part, Gen Z is implicitly postmaterialist. This updated edition of The Oxford Handbook of Psychology and Spirituality…mehr
Postmaterial spiritual psychology posits that consciousness can contribute to the unfolding of material events and that the human brain can detect broad, non-material communications. In this regard, this emerging field of postmaterial psychology marks a stark departure from psychology's traditional assumptions about materialism, making this text particularly attractive to the current generation of students in psychology and related health and wellness disciplines. For the most part, Gen Z is implicitly postmaterialist. This updated edition of The Oxford Handbook of Psychology and Spirituality codifies the leading empirical evidence in the support and application of postmaterial psychological science. Lisa J. Miller has gathered together a group of ground-breaking scholars to showcase their work of many decades that has come further to fruition in the past ten years with the collective momentum of a spiritual renaissance in psychological science. Relevant to both current university students and established scientists and practitioners ready for new models and direction, the chapters trace with epistemological clarity the core questions of psychological science: How does the brain really work? How might experimental design reveal that all people truly are connected at the level of consciousness, both during our lives and after our deaths? Are there multiple pathways to awakening a spiritual reality? How can we pursue growth and spiritual transformation? With new and updated chapters from leading scholars in psychology, medicine, physics, and biology, the Handbook is an interdisciplinary reference for a rapidly emerging approach to contemporary science. Highlighting fresh ideas and supporting science, this overarching work provides both a foundation and a roadmap for what is truly a new ideological age.
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Lisa J. Miller, Ph.D., is a professor in the Clinical Psychology Program at Teachers College at Columbia University and the New York Times bestselling author of The Spiritual Child and The Awakened Brain. She is the Founder of the Spirituality Mind Body Institute, the first Ivy League research institute and place of graduate study in spirituality and psychology, and has held over a decade of joint appointments in the Department of Psychiatry at Columbia University Medical School. Her innovative research has been supported by millions of dollars in grants and is published in more than one hundred peer-reviewed journal articles, including Cerebral Cortex, The American Journal of Psychiatry, JAMA-Psychiatry, and the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Dr. Miller is Founding Co-Editor-in-Chief of the APA journal Spirituality in Clinical Practice, a Founding Associate Editor of Psychology of Religion and Spirituality, an elected Fellow of The American Psychological Association (APA) and the two-time President of the APA Society for Psychology, Religion and Spirituality.
Inhaltsangabe
* Chapter 1: The History and Current Status of the Psychology of Religion and Spirituality * Ralph W. Hood, Jr. * Chapter 2: Theoretical and Epistemological Foundations * James M. Nelson and Brent D. Slife * Chapter 3: Parameters and Limitations of Current Conceptualizations * Fraser N. Watts * * Chapter 4: Progress in Physics and Psychological Science Affects the Psychology of Religion and Spirituality * Everett L. Worthington Jr. * Chapter 5: Spiritual Development during Childhood and Adolescence * Chris J. Boyatzis * Chapter 6: Questions Left Unaddressed by Religious Familism: Are Religiousness and Spirituality Relevant to Non-traditional Families? * Annette Mahoney and Elizabeth J. Krumrei-Mancuso * * Chapter 7: Models of Spiritual and Transpersonal Development * Harris Friedman, Stanley Krippner, Linda Riebel, and Chad Johnson * * Chapter 8: Awakening Education: Nurturing Spirituality in K-12 School Culture * Amy L. Chapman, Lauren Foley, Jen Hebda Halliday, Karen Barth, and Lisa Miller * Chapter 9: Virtues in Positive Psychology and the Psychology of Religion and Spirituality: * Existing Overlap and Promising Possibilities * Everett L. Worthington, Jr., Richard G. Cowden, Edward B. Davis, and Julie J. Exline * * Chapter 10: Personality, Spirituality, and Religion * Joshua A. Wilt, Julie J. Exline, and Eric D. Rose * Chapter 11: The Numinous Motivation Inventory (NMI): A Second-generation Measure of Spirituality * Ralph L. Piedmont * * Chapter 12: Religion, Altruism, and Prosocial Behavior: Conceptual and Empirical Approaches * Elizabeth Midlarsky and Tanya Malik * Chapter 13: Spiritually Sensitive Psychotherapy: An Impending Paradigm Shift in Theory and Practice * Len Sperry * Chapter 14: Journey From a Materialist to a Postmaterialist Perspective-A Portrait * Len Sperry * Chapter 15: Honoring Religious Diversity and Universal Spirituality in Psychotherapy * P. Scott Richards * Chapter 16: Counseling and Psychotherapy Within and Across Faith Traditions * Mark R. McMinn, Megan Anna Neff, Kimberly N. Snow, and Nicholas Schollars * Chapter 17: Psychoanalysis, Psi Phenomena, and Spiritual Space: Common Ground * Ruth Rosenbaum * Chapter 18: Spiritual Aspects of Jungian Analytical Psychology: Individuation, Jung's Psychological Equivalent of a Spiritual Journey * Joseph P. Wagenseller * Chapter 19: Psychology, Meditation and the Brain Across Contemplative Traditions * Brendan D. Kelly * Chapter 20: Translation of Eastern Meditative Disciplines into Western Psychotherapy * Randye J. Semple and Sean P. Hatt * * Chapter 21: Eastern Traditions, Consciousness, and Spirituality * Kartikeya C. Patel * Chapter 22: The Spirituality-Physical Health Linkage: The Key Roles of Emotions * Crystal L. Park, Jeanne M. Slattery, and Tingyi Cao * Chapter 23: Spirituality, Religion, Health, and Professional Psychology * Thomas G. Plante * Chapter 24: Spirituality and Recovery From Psychosis and Serious Mental Disorders * David Lukoff and Will Hall * Chapter 25: Transformation of Brain Function Associated With Spiritual Experience * Andrew B. Newberg * Chapter 26: Neuroimaging and Spiritual Practice * Mario Beauregard * Chapter 27: Near-Death Experiences and Spirituality * Bruce Greyson * Chapter 28: Nonlocal Consciousness and the Anthropology of Religions and Spiritual Practices * Stephan A. Schwartz * Chapter 29: Consciousness, Spirituality, and Postmaterialist Science: An Experimental and Experiential Approach * Gary E. Schwartz * Chapter 30: A Post-Materialist Human Science and Its Implications for Spiritual activism * Amit Goswami * Chapter 31: Beyond Ancient and Modern Superstitions * Dean Radin * Chapter 32: Nonlocality, Intention, and Observer Effects in Healing Studies: Laying a Foundation for the Future * Stephan Schwartz and Larry Dossey * Chapter 33: The Neuroscience of Savant Syndrome, Enlightenment, and Other Extraordinary States * Diane Marie Hennacy * Index
* Chapter 1: The History and Current Status of the Psychology of Religion and Spirituality * Ralph W. Hood, Jr. * Chapter 2: Theoretical and Epistemological Foundations * James M. Nelson and Brent D. Slife * Chapter 3: Parameters and Limitations of Current Conceptualizations * Fraser N. Watts * * Chapter 4: Progress in Physics and Psychological Science Affects the Psychology of Religion and Spirituality * Everett L. Worthington Jr. * Chapter 5: Spiritual Development during Childhood and Adolescence * Chris J. Boyatzis * Chapter 6: Questions Left Unaddressed by Religious Familism: Are Religiousness and Spirituality Relevant to Non-traditional Families? * Annette Mahoney and Elizabeth J. Krumrei-Mancuso * * Chapter 7: Models of Spiritual and Transpersonal Development * Harris Friedman, Stanley Krippner, Linda Riebel, and Chad Johnson * * Chapter 8: Awakening Education: Nurturing Spirituality in K-12 School Culture * Amy L. Chapman, Lauren Foley, Jen Hebda Halliday, Karen Barth, and Lisa Miller * Chapter 9: Virtues in Positive Psychology and the Psychology of Religion and Spirituality: * Existing Overlap and Promising Possibilities * Everett L. Worthington, Jr., Richard G. Cowden, Edward B. Davis, and Julie J. Exline * * Chapter 10: Personality, Spirituality, and Religion * Joshua A. Wilt, Julie J. Exline, and Eric D. Rose * Chapter 11: The Numinous Motivation Inventory (NMI): A Second-generation Measure of Spirituality * Ralph L. Piedmont * * Chapter 12: Religion, Altruism, and Prosocial Behavior: Conceptual and Empirical Approaches * Elizabeth Midlarsky and Tanya Malik * Chapter 13: Spiritually Sensitive Psychotherapy: An Impending Paradigm Shift in Theory and Practice * Len Sperry * Chapter 14: Journey From a Materialist to a Postmaterialist Perspective-A Portrait * Len Sperry * Chapter 15: Honoring Religious Diversity and Universal Spirituality in Psychotherapy * P. Scott Richards * Chapter 16: Counseling and Psychotherapy Within and Across Faith Traditions * Mark R. McMinn, Megan Anna Neff, Kimberly N. Snow, and Nicholas Schollars * Chapter 17: Psychoanalysis, Psi Phenomena, and Spiritual Space: Common Ground * Ruth Rosenbaum * Chapter 18: Spiritual Aspects of Jungian Analytical Psychology: Individuation, Jung's Psychological Equivalent of a Spiritual Journey * Joseph P. Wagenseller * Chapter 19: Psychology, Meditation and the Brain Across Contemplative Traditions * Brendan D. Kelly * Chapter 20: Translation of Eastern Meditative Disciplines into Western Psychotherapy * Randye J. Semple and Sean P. Hatt * * Chapter 21: Eastern Traditions, Consciousness, and Spirituality * Kartikeya C. Patel * Chapter 22: The Spirituality-Physical Health Linkage: The Key Roles of Emotions * Crystal L. Park, Jeanne M. Slattery, and Tingyi Cao * Chapter 23: Spirituality, Religion, Health, and Professional Psychology * Thomas G. Plante * Chapter 24: Spirituality and Recovery From Psychosis and Serious Mental Disorders * David Lukoff and Will Hall * Chapter 25: Transformation of Brain Function Associated With Spiritual Experience * Andrew B. Newberg * Chapter 26: Neuroimaging and Spiritual Practice * Mario Beauregard * Chapter 27: Near-Death Experiences and Spirituality * Bruce Greyson * Chapter 28: Nonlocal Consciousness and the Anthropology of Religions and Spiritual Practices * Stephan A. Schwartz * Chapter 29: Consciousness, Spirituality, and Postmaterialist Science: An Experimental and Experiential Approach * Gary E. Schwartz * Chapter 30: A Post-Materialist Human Science and Its Implications for Spiritual activism * Amit Goswami * Chapter 31: Beyond Ancient and Modern Superstitions * Dean Radin * Chapter 32: Nonlocality, Intention, and Observer Effects in Healing Studies: Laying a Foundation for the Future * Stephan Schwartz and Larry Dossey * Chapter 33: The Neuroscience of Savant Syndrome, Enlightenment, and Other Extraordinary States * Diane Marie Hennacy * Index
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