(DOWNLOAD) "Secular Psychology: What's the Problem?" by Journal of Psychology and Theology * Book PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Secular Psychology: What's the Problem?
- Author : Journal of Psychology and Theology
- Release Date : January 22, 2006
- Genre: Religion & Spirituality,Books,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 214 KB
Description
Although both psychology and religion are concerned with many similar issues (e.g., health and well-being, meaning and purpose) and treat them in some analogous ways (e.g., counseling) they have long been formally separated. This formal separation is due, in part, to the secularization of modern society, which, according to most definitions, means that "religious ideas, practice, and organizations lose their influence in the face of scientific and other knowledge" (McLeish, 1995, p. 668). For many secularists, relying on faith in supernatural beings or processes is tantamount to the primitive superstitions of undeveloped societies (de la Chaumiere, 2004). In these societies, argue the secularists, the practice of religious superstition often subjugates members of the society to an unseen authority and an unjustified dogma in a way that works against the free exercise of thought and results in closed-mindedness and developmental stagnation. For the secularist, notes Gunton (1993), "the worship of God takes place necessarily at the expense of human individuality and freedom" (p. 26). Moreover, because power is typically held and wielded by those few individuals who claim a privileged relationship to supernatural beings and forces--such as priests, shaman, and the like--the common person has little choice but to obey their commands. Upon consideration of the historical and current repercussions of these conditions, modern day secularists, including secular psychologists, have concluded that religious authorities and ideas ought to be rejected as a basis for society and treated by academics as oppressive and/or irrelevant holdovers from an earlier, more primitive stage of society (de la Chaumiere, 2004). In this sense, secularization stands for more than simply separating scientific disciplines like psychology from religion. It also relegates religion to a second-class status because religion relies on faith for its truth claims and as a result simply cannot be in the same class as disciplines like psychology that rely on knowledge gained through proper scientific inquiry (Kaplan & Saccuzzo, 2001). "Faith," asserts research psychologist, Gary Heiman (1998), "is the acceptance of the truth of a statement without questions or needing proof" (p. 7). Scientists, on the other hand, he argues, "question and ask for proof" (p. 7), "by obtaining empirical, objective, systematic, and controlled observations that allow them to describe, explain, predict, and control the behavior. Each finding is rigorously evaluated in a skeptical yet open-minded manner, so that an accurate understanding of the laws of behavior can be developed" (p. 11). For the secularist, scientific epistemologies are not only different from, but also superior to religious ones.