Hi

I somewhat disagree with John's characterization here.

1. If you choose all the relig* entries in PsycINFO's thesaurus, you
arrive at 40,757 hits.  So I would not say that religion has been
"neglected" as a topic.  Of course, this will be a quite varied
hodge-podge of studies.

2. I'm not sure that any psychologists (or at least many psychologists)
think that the inherent conflict between religion and science means that
religion or spirituality cannot be studied. Indeed, it strikes me that
it is more likely that those who perceive religion as something
"special" are more likely to view it as beyond scientific study and
explanation (especially the latter?).

3. I do think that there is a danger that people with religious
leanings might allow their religiousness to colour their academic work. 
For example, I was not much comforted to read on the cover of one book
on Psychology and Religion that all the authors were people of faith
(presumably spoken with pride?).  And Sage's Transpersonal Research
Methods was extremely disappointing to me as a science-leaning
psychologist.  But those of faith might similarly respond that
non-believers let their non-beliefs (?) color their work.

4. I do agree with John that we need to pay even more attention to
religion.  Religion is extremely important to many people in other
cultures, far more so even than the relatively religious USA.  In the
Middle East, for example, Pew surveys indicate that well over 90% of the
population will report that religion is very important to them (vs.
about 66% in USA vs about 39% in Canada vs about 10% in France).  So as
Psychology becomes more internationalized, we are going to bump up
against religion more than has been the case in the past.

5. I suspect that religion is going to prove to be one of those highly
politicized areas that pop up now and then in psychology, like
differences between races (or the concept of race), and differences
between genders.  And this will probably be more evidenced in countries
with higher levels of religiosity.  For example, the literature on
positive and negative behaviors associated with religion is likely to be
quite politicized.

Take care
Jim


James M. Clark
Professor & Chair of Psychology
[email protected]
Room 4L41A
204-786-9757
204-774-4134 Fax
Dept of Psychology, U of Winnipeg
515 Portage Ave, Winnipeg, MB
R3B 0R4  CANADA


>>> John Kulig <[email protected]> 14-Mar-13 9:25 AM >>>

Relevance to psychology .. I will be brief but have to give my annual
spiel but will make it brief. 

Many evolutionary psychologists make very good cases that
religiosity/spirituality is a basic human category of behaviors present
in all cultures and at all times in recorded history. See
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolutionary_psychology_of_religion 

and there is also an excellent chapter by Paul Bloom "Religion,
Morality and Evolution" in the 2012 Annual Review of Psychology . 

We can see behavior IN religious practices that are universal - group
identification processes, in-group/out-group dynamics, deference to
authority (in some societies the pope is revered and looked to for
guidance and meaning .. in others movie stars and sports figures play
that role). Calender dates, rhythms to seasons and holidays revolve
around religious (or spiritual) events, but, if they don't there are
secular calender cycles that play the same role. There is now enough
evidence to support the God gene idea (see the wikipedia entry), and
some factor analytic support for Spirituality as a separate personality
trait rivaling the "big 5." Yet with all these lines of evidence,
religiosity/spirituality remains conspicuously neglected as a research
topic. Div 36 of APA (spiritual/religiosity) is a start, though much of
the research presented at the conferences are applied. 

IMO there are two obstacles here. One is the false (to me) idea that
religion involves *beliefs* more than behaviors. Second and related, we
tend to think of these beliefs as being so antithetical to science that
religiosity (and perhaps spirituality) cannot be studied scientifically.
OK end of spiel! And it's OK that Boston is not everyone's fav :-) 

JK 


========================== 
John W. Kulig, Ph.D. 
Professor of Psychology 
Coordinator, University Honors 
Plymouth State University 
Plymouth NH 03264 
========================== 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Mike Palij" <[email protected]> 
To: "Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)"
<[email protected]> 
Cc: "Michael Palij" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2013 4:09:22 PM 
Subject: re: [tips] Hey, We Got A Pope! Really? 

On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 12:23:56 -0700, Dap Louw wrote: 
>And the relationship to the Teaching in Psychological Sciences is 
>.............?? 

>From the Wikipedia entry on Pope Francis (boy, those folks are fast!):

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jorge_Bergoglio 
|Jorge Bergoglio was born in Buenos Aires, one of the five 
|children of an Italian railway worker and his wife.[2] He 
|received a master's degree in chemistry at the University of 
|Buenos Aires, then studied at the seminary in Villa Devoto. 
|He entered the Society of Jesus on 11 March 1958. Bergoglio 
|obtained a licentiate in philosophy from the Colegio Máximo 
|San José in San Miguel, and then 

Got to break in here and say "wait for it". 

|taught literature and psychology at the Colegio de la Inmaculada 
|in Santa Fe, and the Colegio del Salvador in Buenos Aires. 

OMG! A Pope that TAUGHT PSYCHOLOGY!!!!! 

See, I run rings around you logically! 

|He was ordained to the priesthood on 13 December 1969, by 
|Archbishop Ramón José Castellano. He attended the Philosophical 
|and Theological Faculty of San Miguel, a seminary in San Miguel. 
|Bergoglio attained the position of novice master there and became 
|professor of theology. 

A PROFESSOR! WOW! 

Well, maybe you are right and this has nothing to do with teaching. 

>But just in case I miss the point: A new Minister of Transport was 
>announced in Cape Town today ..... not Zulu- but Xhosa-speaking (do
not 
>forget the clicking sound). She is doing a good job with promoting 
>traditional medicine and she looks, well ..... African. Very humble as

>well. Btw, she's from Ngqamakhwe in the Eastern Cape, which I also 
>prefer to Boston. 

Hmm, has she taught a Psychology of Transportation course? ;-) 

>Okay, okay .... it must be my blood sugar ? 

Eat a Snickers(tm) bar. You're not yourself when you're hungry. ;-) 
NOTE: Do Canadians get this TV commercial up in the Great White 
North? 

>Regards from this side of the ocean. 

Yeah, the same to you. 

-Mike Palij 
New York University 
[email protected] 



>>> "Mike Palij" <[email protected]> 2013/03/13 08:29 PM >>> 
On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 11:17:21 -0700, John Kulig wrote: 
>Mike et al 
> 
>I'm laying my bet on O'Mally from Boston ... not an Italian but 
>he is perceived as doing good job with scandals AND he really 
>looks the part (the beard and all) ... 

As much as it pains me to say something nice about Boston, O'Malley 
is my choice, primarily because of his humbleness and apparent good 
sense. I don't like Dolan. 

-Mike Palij 
New York University 
[email protected] 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: "Mike Palij" <[email protected]> 
To: "Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)" 
<[email protected]> 
Cc: "Michael Palij" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2013 2:09:40 PM 
Subject: [tips] Hey, We Got A Pope! 

Or else someone used the wrong smoke. No word yet on 
who it is but in about 45 minutes we should know (if the white 
smoke wasn't a mistake). 

So go back to work now. ;-) 


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