Psychology of religion is the
psychological study of
religious experiences,
beliefs, and activities.
History
William James
U.S. psychologist and philosopher
William
James (1842-1910) is regarded by most psychologists of religion
as the founder of the field. He served as president of the
American Psychological Association, and wrote one of the
first psychology textbooks. In the psychology of religion, James'
influence endures. His
Varieties of Religious
Experience is considered to be the classic work in the
field, and references to James' ideas are common at professional
conferences.
James distinguished between
institutional religion and
personal religion. Institutional religion
refers to the religious group or organization, and plays an
important part in a society's culture. Personal religion, in which
the individual has
mystical
experience, can be experienced regardless of the culture. James
was most interested in understanding personal religious
experience.
In studying personal religious experiences, James made a
distinction between
healthy-minded and
sick-souled religiousness. Individuals predisposed to
healthy-mindedness tend to ignore the evil in the world and focus
on the positive and the good. James used examples of
Walt Whitman and the "
mind-cure" religious movement to illustrate
healthy-mindedness in
The Varieties of Religious
Experience. In contrast, individuals predisposed to having a
sick-souled religion are unable to ignore evil and suffering, and
need a unifying experience, religious or otherwise, to reconcile
good and evil. James included quotations from
Leo Tolstoy and
John
Bunyan to illustrate the sick soul.
William James' hypothesis of pragmatism stems from the efficacy of
religion. If an individual believes in and performs religious
activities, and those actions happen to work, then that practice
appears the proper choice for the individual. However, if the
processes of religion have little efficacy, then there is no
rationality for continuing the practice.
Other early theorists
Sigmund Freud
Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) gave
explanations of the genesis of religion in his various writings. In
Totem and Taboo, he applied
the idea of the
Oedipus complex
(involving unresolved sexual feelings of, for example, a son toward
his mother and hostility toward his father) and postulated its
emergence in the primordial stage of human development.
In
Moses and
Monotheism, Freud reconstructed biblical history in
accordance with his general theory. His ideas were also developed
in
The Future of an
Illusion. When Freud spoke of religion as an
illusion, he maintained that it
is a fantasy
structure from which a man must be set free if he is to grow to
maturity.
Freud views the idea of
God as being a version
of the
father image, and religious belief as
at bottom infantile and
neurotic.
Authoritarian religion is dysfunctional and alienates man from
himself.
Carl Jung
The Swiss psychoanalyst
Carl Jung
(1875-1961) adopted a very different posture, one that was more
sympathetic to religion and more concerned with a positive
appreciation of
religious
symbolism. Jung considered the question of the existence of God
to be unanswerable by the psychologist and adopted a kind of
agnosticism.
Jung postulated, in addition to the personal
unconscious (roughly adopting Freud's
concept), the
collective
unconscious, which is the repository of human experience and
which contains “
archetypes” (i.e. basic
images that are universal in that they recur regardless of
culture). The irruption of these images from the unconscious into
the realm of consciousness he viewed as the basis of
religious experience and often of
artistic creativity. Some of Jung's writings have been devoted to
elucidating some of the archetypal
symbols,
and include his work in
comparative mythology.
Jung had a very broad view of what it means to be empirical.
Suppose, for example, one person hears something whereas someone
else near that person does not. If only one person experiences
something, for Jung it is an empirical observation. For most
contemporary scientists, however, it would not be considered an
empirical observation. Because of this, there has been little
research in the psychology of religion from a Jungian
perspective.
Alfred Adler
Austrian psychiatrist
Alfred Adler
(1870-1937), who parted ways with Freud, emphasised the role of
goals and motivation in his
Individual Psychology. One of
Adler's most famous ideas is that we try to compensate for
inferiorities that we perceive in ourselves. A lack of power often
lies at the root of feelings of inferiority. One way that religion
enters into this picture is through our beliefs in God, which are
characteristic of our tendency to strive for perfection and
superiority. For example, in many religions God is considered to be
perfect and omnipotent, and commands people likewise to be perfect.
If we, too, achieve perfection, we become one with God. By
identifying with God in this way, we compensate for our
imperfections and feelings of inferiority.
Our ideas about God are important indicators of how we view the
world. According to Adler, these ideas have changed over time, as
our vision of the world - and our place in it - has changed.
Consider this example that Adler offers: the traditional belief
that people were placed deliberately on earth as God's ultimate
creation is being replaced with the idea that people have evolved
by
natural selection. This
coincides with a view of God not as a real being, but as an
abstract representation of nature's forces. In this way our view of
God has changed from one that was concrete and specific to one that
is more general. From Adler's vantage point, this is a relatively
ineffective perception of God because it is so general that it
fails to convey a strong sense of direction and purpose.
An important thing for Adler is that God (or the idea of God)
motivates people to act, and that those actions do have real
consequences for ourselves and for others. Our view of God is
important because it embodies our goals and directs our social
interactions.
Compared to
science, another social
movement, religion is more efficient because it motivates people
more effectively. According to Adler, only when science begins to
capture the same religious fervour, and promotes the welfare of all
segments of society, will the two be more equal in peoples'
eyes.
Gordon Allport
In his classic book
The Individual and His Religion
(1950),
Gordon Allport (1897-1967)
illustrates how people may use religion in different ways. He makes
a distinction between
Mature religion and
Immature
religion. Mature religious sentiment is how Allport
characterized the person whose approach to religion is dynamic,
open-minded, and able to maintain links between inconsistencies. In
contrast, immature religion is
self-serving
and generally represents the negative stereotypes that people have
about religion.More recently, this distinction has been
encapsulated in the terms "intrinsic religion", referring to a
genuine, heartfelt devout
faith, and
"extrinsic religion", referring to a more utilitarian use of
religion as a means to an end, such as
church attendance to gain
social status. These dimensions of religion
were measured on the Religious Orientation Scale of Allport and
Ross (1967). A third form of religious orientation has been
described by
Daniel Batson. This
refers to treatment of religion as an open-ended search (Batson,
Schoenrade & Ventis, 1993).More specifically, it has been seen
by Batson as comprising a willingness to view religious doubts in a
positive manner, acceptance that religious orientation can change
and existential complexity, the belief that one's religious beliefs
should be shaped from personal crises that one has experienced in
one's life. Batson refers to extrinsic, intrinsic and quest
respectively as Religion-as-means, religion-as-end and
religion-as-quest, and measures these constructs on the Religious
Life Inventory (Batson, Schoenrade & Ventis, 1993).
Erik H. Erikson
Erik Erikson (1902-94) is best known
for his theory of psychological development, which has its roots in
the psychoanalytic importance of identity in personality. His
biographies of
Gandhi and
Martin Luther reveal Erikson's positive view
of religion. He considered religions to be important influences in
successful
personality
development because they are the primary way that cultures
promote the
virtues associated with each
stage of life. Religious
rituals facilitate
this development. Erikson's theory has not benefited from
systematic empirical study, but it remains an influential and
well-regarded theory in the psychological study of religion.
Erich Fromm
The American scholar
Erich Fromm
(1900-1980) modified Freudian theory and produced a more complex
account of the functions of religion. Part of the modification is
viewing the
Oedipus complex as based
not so much on sexuality as on a “much more profound desire”,
namely, the childish desire to remain attached to protecting
figures. The right religion, in Fromm's estimation, can, in
principle, foster an individual's highest potentialities, but
religion in practice tends to relapse into being neurotic.
According to Erich Fromm, humans have a need for a stable frame of
reference. Religion apparently fills this need. In effect, humans
crave answers to questions that no other source of knowledge has an
answer to, which only religion may seem to answer. However, a sense
of free will must be given in order for religion to appear healthy.
An authoritarian notion of religion appears detrimental.
Rudolf Otto
Rudolf Otto (1869-1937) was a German
Protestant theologian and scholar of comparative
religion. Otto's most famous work,
The Idea of the
Holy (published first in 1917 as
Das
Heilige), defines the concept of the holy as that which is
numinous. Otto explained the numinous as a "non-rational,
non-sensory experience or feeling whose primary and immediate
object is outside the self." It is a
mystery (Latin:
mysterium
tremendum) that is both fascinating (
fascinans) and
terrifying at the same time; A mystery that causes trembling and
fascination, attempting to explain that inexpressible and perhaps
supernatural emotional reaction of
wonder
drawing us to seemingly ordinary and/or religious experiences of
grace. This sense of emotional wonder
appears evident at the root of all religious experiences. Through
this emotional wonder, we suspend our rational mind for
non-rational possibilities.
It also sets a
paradigm for the study of
religion that focuses on the need to realise the religious as a
non-reducible, original category in its own right. This paradigm
was under much attack between approximately 1950 and 1990 but has
made a strong comeback since then.
Contemporary Thinkers
Steven Reiss
Steven Reiss is a Faculty Emeritus at Ohio State University who
recently theorized that there are 16 basic human psychological
needs that motivate people to seek meaning through religion. In the
June 2004 issue of Zygon, a journal devoted to issues of science
and religion, Reiss uses sensitivity theory which provide a more
complex and multifaceted analysis of how religion meets human needs
that is consistent with the diversity, richness, and individuality
of religious experiences"
James Hillman
James Hillman, at the end of his book
Re-Visioning Psychology, reverses James' position of viewing
religion through psychology, urging instead that we view psychology
as a variety of religious experience. He concludes: "Psychology as
religion implies imagining all psychological events as effects of
Gods in the soul."
Psychometric approaches to religion
Since the 1960s psychologists of religion have used the methodology
of
psychometrics to assess different
ways in which a person may be religious. An example is the
Religious Orientation Scale of
Allport and
Ross, which
measures how respondents stand on intrinsic and extrinsic religion
as described by Allport.More recent questionnaires include the
Religious Life Inventory of Batson, Schoenrade and Ventis, and the
Age-Universal I-E Scale of Gorsuch and Venable.The former assesses
where people stand on three distinct forms of religious orientation
- religion as means, religion as end, and religion as quest. The
latter assesses Spiritual Support and Spiritual Openness.
Religious orientations and religious dimensions
Some questionnaires, such as the
Religious Orientation Scale,
relate to different religious orientations, such as intrinsic and
extrinsic religiousness, referring to different motivations for
religious allegiance. A rather different approach, taken, for
example, by Glock and Stark (1965), has been to list different
dimensions of religion rather than different religious
orientations, which relates to how an individual may manifest
different forms of being religious. (More on Stark's work can be
found in the article on
Sociology
of Religion.) Glock and Stark's famous typology described five
dimensions of religion - the doctrinal, the intellectual, the
ethical-consequential, the ritual, and the experiential. In later
work these authors subdivided the ritual dimension into devotional
and public ritual, and also clarified that their distinction of
religion along multiple dimensions was not identical to
distinguishing religious orientations. Although some psychologists
of religion have found it helpful to take a multidimensional
approach to religion for the purpose of psychometric scale design,
there has been, as Wulff (1997) explains, considerable controversy
about whether religion should really be seen as
multidimensional.
Questionnaires to assess religious experience
What we call religious experiences can differ greatly. Some reports
exist of supernatural happenings that it would be difficult to
explain from a rational, scientific point of view. On the other
hand, there also exist the sort of testimonies that simply seem to
convey a feeling of peace or oneness - something which most of us,
religious or not, may possibly relate to. In categorizing religious
experiences it is perhaps helpful to look at them as explicable
through one of two theories: the Objectivist thesis or the
Subjectivist thesis.
An objectivist would argue that the religious experience is a proof
of God's existence. However, others have criticised the reliability
of religious experiences. The English philosopher Thomas Hobbes
asked how it was possible to tell the difference between talking to
God in a dream, and dreaming about talking to God.
The Subjectivist view argues that it is not necessary to think of
religious experiences as evidence for the existence of an actual
being whom we call God. From this point of view, the important
thing is the experience itself and the effect that it has on the
individual.
Reference:
http://www.philosophyonline.co.uk/pages/relex_main.htm#
Developmental approaches to religion
Attempts have been made to apply stage models, such as that of
Jean Piaget and
Lawrence Kohlberg, to how children develop
ideas about God and about religion in general.
By far the most well-known stage model of spiritual or religious
development is that of
James W.
Fowler, a
developmental psychologist at the
Candler School of
Theology, in his
Stages of Faith. He follows Piaget
and Kohlberg and has proposed a
staged development of
faith (or spiritual development) across the lifespan
in terms of a holistic orientation, and is concerned with the
individual's relatedness to the universal.
The book-length study contains a framework and ideas considered by
many to be insightful and which have generated a good deal of
response from those interested in religion, so it appears to have
at least a reasonable degree of
face
validity. James Fowler proposes six stages of faith development
as follows:1. Intuitive-projective2. Symbolic Literal3. Synthetic
Conventional4. Individuating5. Paradoxical (conjunctive)6.
Universalising.Although there is evidence that children up to the
age of twelve years do tend to be in the first two of these stages,
there is evidence that adults over the age of sixty-one do show
considerable variation in displays of qualities of Stages 3 and
beyond. Fowler's model has generated some empirical studies, and
fuller descriptions of this research (and of these six stages) can
be found in Wulff (1991). However, this model has been attacked
froma standpoint of
scientific
research due to methodological weaknesses. Of Fowler's six
stages, only the first two found empirical support, and these were
heavily based upon Piaget's stages of
cognitive development. The
tables and graphs in the book were presented in such a way that the
last four stages appeared to be validated, but the requirements of
statistical
verification of the stages did not come close to having been
met. The study was not published in a journal, so was not
peer-reviewed, and never drew much attention from psychologists.
Other critics of Fowler have questioned whether his ordering of the
stages really reflects his own commitment to a rather liberal
Christian Protestant outlook, as if to say that people who adopt a
similar viewpoint to Fowler are at higher stages of faith
development. Nevertheless, the concepts Fowler introduced seemed to
hit home with those in the circles of
academic religion, and have been an
important starting point for various theories and subsequent
studies.
A recent contributor here has put forward a stage model, Vicky
Genia (see information in
Psychometric Approaches to Religion).
Religion and coping with stress
Psychologists of religion have looked at how individuals may use
religion as a resource in coping with
stress. A major contributor to this theory
is
Kenneth Pargament, whose work
shows the influence of
attribution
theory. Pargament has distinguished styles of coping into the
deferring, in which people leave God to see to their
problems; the
non-religious, in which they do not appeal
to God; and the
collaborative, in which people believe
that a co-operation of God and their own efforts are necessary to
help them to cope with stress. Some of Pargament's papers have been
published in the
Journal for the Scientific Study of
Religion.
Religion and health
There is considerable literature on the relationship between
religion and health. Psychologists consider that there are various
ways in which religion may benefit both physical and mental health,
including encouraging healthy lifestyles such as abstinence from
tobacco, providing social support networks and encouraging an
optimistic outlook on life; prayer and meditation may also help to
benefit physiological functioning.
The journal "American Psychologist" published important papers on
this topic in 2003.
Haber, Jacob and Spangler have considered how different dimensions
of religiosity may relate to health benefits in different
ways.
Evolutionary psychology of religion
Evolutionary psychology is
based on the hypothesis that, just like hearts, lungs, livers,
kidneys, and immune systems,
cognition has
functional structure that has a genetic basis, and therefore
evolved by
natural selection. Like
other organs and tissues, this functional structure should be
universally shared amongst humans and should solve important
problems of survival and reproduction. Evolutionary psychologists
seek to understand cognitive processes by understanding the
survival and reproductive functions they might serve.
Pascal Boyer is one of the leading
figures in the cognitive psychology of religion, a new field of
inquiry that is less than fifteen years old, which accounts for the
psychological processes that underlie religious thought and
practice. In his book
Religion Explained, Boyer shows that
there is no simple explanation for religious
consciousness. Boyer is mainly concerned with
explaining the various psychological processes involved in the
acquisition and transmission of ideas concerning the gods. Boyer
builds on the ideas of cognitive anthropologists
Dan Sperber and
Scott
Atran, who first argued that religious cognition represents a
by-product of various evolutionary adaptations, including folk
psychology, and purposeful violations of innate expectations about
how the world is constructed (for example, bodiless beings with
thoughts and emotions) that make religious cognitions striking and
memorable.
Religious persons acquire religious ideas and practices through
social exposure. The child of a
Zen Buddhist will not become an evangelical
Christian or a
Zulu warrior
without the relevant cultural experience. While mere exposure does
not cause a particular religious outlook (a person may have been
raised a
Roman Catholic but leave the
church), nevertheless some exposure seems required - this person
will never invent Roman Catholicism out of thin air. Boyer says
cognitive science can help us to
understand the psychological mechanisms that account for these
manifest correlations and in so doing enable us to better
understand the nature of religious belief and practice.To the
extent that the mechanisms controlling the acquisitions and
transmission of religious concepts rely on human
brains, the mechanisms are open to computational
analysis. All thought is computationally structured, including
religious thought. So presumably, computational approaches can shed
light on the nature and scope of religious cognition.
Boyer moves outside the leading currents in mainstream
cognitive psychology and suggests that
we can use evolutionary biology to unravel the relevant mental
architecture. Our brains are, after all, biological objects, and
the best naturalistic account of their development in nature is
Darwin's
theory of evolution. To
the extent that mental architecture exhibits intricate processes
and structures, it is plausible to think that this is the result of
evolutionary processes working over vast periods of time. Like all
biological systems, the mind is optimised to promote survival and
reproduction in the evolutionary environment. On this view all
specialised cognitive functions broadly serve those
reproductive ends.
For
Steven Pinker the universal
propensity toward religious belief is a genuine scientific puzzle.
He thinks that
adaptationist
explanations for religion do not meet the criteria for adaptations.
An alternative explanation is that religious psychology is a
by-product of many parts of the mind that evolved for other
purposes.
Religion and drugs
James H. Leuba
The American psychologist
James H.
Leuba (1868-1946), in
A
Psychological Study of Religion, accounts for mystical
experience psychologically and physiologically, pointing to
analogies with certain drug-induced experiences. Leuba argued
forcibly for a naturalistic treatment of religion, which he
considered to be necessary if religious psychology were to be
looked at scientifically. Shamans all over the world and in
different cultures have traditionally used drugs, especially
psychedelics, for their religious experiences. In these communities
the absorption of
drugs leads to
dreams (visions) through sensory distortion.
William James was also interested in
mystical experiences from a drug-induced perspective, leading him
to make some experiments with
nitrous
oxide and even peyote. He concludes that while the revelations
of the mystic hold true, they hold true only for the mystic; for
others they are certainly ideas to be considered, but hold no claim
to truth without personal experience of such.
Drug-induced religious experiences
- See main article 'entheogen
on the use of psychoactive
substances in a religious or shamanic
context.
The
drugs used by religious
communities for their
hallucinogenic
effects were adopted for explicit and implicit religious functions
and purposes. The drugs were and are reported to enhance religious
experience through visions and a distortion of the sensory
perception (like in dreams in a state of sleep).
- Cannabis, which grows all
over the world except in very cold climates, is used in religious
practices in Indian
and African communities
- Certain psychedelic mushrooms are used by
Indians in Latin America, especially
in the state of Oaxaca
in southern
Mexico
. The chief species is Psilocybe mexicana, of which the
active principles are psilocin and its
derivative psilocybin, in their chemical
composition and activity not unlike LSD
(D-lysergic acid diethylamide); the latter is synthesized from the
alkaloids (principally ergotamine and
ergonovine) that are constituents of ergot, a
growth present in grasses affected by the disease also called
ergot. Amanita muscaria
(fly agaric) is another mushroom having hallucinogenic properties
that has not been thoroughly studied. It may be extremely
important, since it may have been the natural source of the ritual
soma drink of the ancient Hindus and the comparable haoma
used by the Zoroastrians (although other
sources point toward ephedra as the main ingredient of Soma ). Fly
agaric is mildly toxic at high dosages and is said to have, in
addition to its hallucinogenic properties, the ability to increase
strength and endurance. It is said also to be a soporific.
- Peyote used by some Indian
communities of Mexico. The chief active principle of peyote is an
alkaloid called mescaline. Like psilocin
and psilocybin, mescaline is reputed to produce visions and other
evidences of a mystical nature. Despite claims of missionaries and
some government agents that peyote - from the Nahuatl word peyotl ("divine messenger") -
is a degenerative and dangerous drug, there appears to be no
evidence of this among the members of the Native American Church, a
North American Indian cult that uses peyote in its chief religious
ceremony. Peyote, like most other hallucinogenic drugs, is not
considered to be addictive and, far from being a destructive
influence, is reputed by cultists and some observers to promote
morality and ethical behaviour among the Indians who use it
ritually.
- Ayahuasca, caapi, or
yajé, is produced from the stem bark of the vines
Banisteriopsis caapi
and B. inebrians. Indians who use it claim that its
virtues include healing powers and the power to induce
clairvoyance, among others. This drink has been certified by
investigators to produce remarkable effects, often involving the
sensation of flying. The effects are thought to be attributable to
the action of harmine, a very stable indole
that is the active principle in the plant. While the Indians
themselves attribute the properties of the drink Ayahuasca to
B. caapi, this is not the common scientific view; the
MAOIs present in the B. caapi instead allow the extremely
psychedelic ingredients in other plants added to the brew,
noticeably plants containing DMT, to be activated and produce an
intense experience.
- Kava drink, prepared from the
roots of Piper
methysticum, a species of pepper, and seemingly more of a
hypnotic-narcotic than a hallucinogen, is used both socially and
ritually in the South Pacific, especially in
Polynesia.
- Iboga, a stimulant and
hallucinogen derived from the root bark of the African shrub
Tabernanthe iboga is used within
the Bwiti religion in Central Africa. The active ingredient in T.
iboga is ibogaine, a drug that has been
studied for its use in treating addiction.
- Coca, source of cocaine, has had
both ritual and social use chiefly in Peru.
- Datura, one species of which is
the jimsonweed, is used by native peoples
in North and South America; the active principle, however, is
highly toxic and dangerous. A drink prepared from the shrub
Mimosa hostilis, which is
said to produce glorious visions in warriors before battle, is used
ritually in the ajuca ceremony of the Jurema
cult in eastern Brazil.
- Salvia divinorum, a
member of the sage family of plants, is a
hallucinogen used
by Mazatec shamans for
"spiritual journeys" during healing.
The effects of meditation
The large variety of
meditation
techniques shares the common goal of shifting attention away from
habitual or customary modes of
thinking and
perception, in order to
permit experiencing in a different way.Many religious and spiritual
traditions that employ meditation assert that the world most of us
know is an illusion. This illusion is said to be created by our
habitual mode of separating, classifying and labelling our
perceptual experiences.Meditation is
empirical in that it
involves direct experience. Though it is also
subjective
in that the meditative state can be directly known only by the
experiencer, and may be difficult or impossible to fully describe
in words.
Concentrative meditation can induce an
altered state of
consciousness characterised by a loss of
awareness of extraneous
stimuli, one-pointed attention to the meditation
object to the exclusion of all other thoughts, and feelings of
bliss.
References
- Zygon, Volume 39, Number 2, June 2004 , pp. 303-320(18)
- James Hillman, Re-Visioning Psychology, HarperCollins, NY,
1977, p227
- ISBN 0-06-062866-9
- Levin, 2001
- see those by Miller and Thoresen (2003) and Powell, Shahabi and
Thorsen (2003); see also the article by Oman and Thoresen, in
Paloutzian and Park (1996)
- Haber, Jacob & Spangler, 2007)
- Aitchison, 1888
- Bakels, C.C. 2003. “The contents of ceramic vessels in the
Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex, Turkmenistan.” in
Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies, Vol. 9. Issue 1c (May 5)
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a Measure of Reported Mystical Experience, Journal for the
Scientific Study of Religion, 1975.
- Leuba, J. H., The Psychology of Religious Mysticism,
New York, Harcourt, Brace, 1925.
- Leuba, J. H., The Psychological Origin and the Nature of
Religion. Wikisource text
- Levin, J. (2001). God, Faith and Spirituality: Exploring the
Spirituality-Health Connection. New York: Wiley
- Paloutzian, C. & Park, R. (1996).Handbook of Religion and
Spirituality.
- Miller & Thoresen (2003) American Psychologist
- Powell, L.H., Shahabi, L. & Thoresen, C. (2003). Religion
and spirituality.
- Links to physical health. American Psychologist. 58
pp36-52
- Wulff, D. M., Psychology of Religion: Classic and
Contemporary (2nd ed), New York, Wiley, 1997.
Further reading
- Fontana, D., Psychology, Religion and Spirituality,
Oxford, Blackwell, 2003.
- Fuller, A. R. (1994). Psychology & religion: Eight points
of view (3rd ed.). Lanham, MD: Littlefield Adams. ISBN
0822630362.
- Hood, R. W. Jr., Spilka, B., Hunsberger, B., & Gorsuch, R.
(1996). The psychology of religion: An empirical approach.
New York: Guilford. ISBN 1572301163
- Levin, J., God, Faith and Health: Exploring the
Spirituality-Health Connection, New York, Wiley, 2001.
- Loewenthal, K. M., Psychology of Religion: A Short
Introduction, Oxford, Oneworld, 2000.
- McNamara, R. (Ed.) (2006), Where God and Science Meet [3
Volumes]: How Brain and Evolutionary Studies Alter Our
Understanding of Religion. Westport, CT:
Praeger/Greenwood.
- Paloutzian, R. (1996). Invitation to the Psychology of
Religion, 2nd Ed. New York: Allyn and Bacon. ISBN
0205148409.
- Meissner, W., Psychoanalysis and Religious Experience,
London and New Haven, Yale University Press, 1984.
- Roberts, T. B., and Hruby, P. J. (1995-2002). Religion and
Psychoactive Sacraments An Entheogen Chrestomathy. Online archive.
[57768]
- Wulff, D. M. (1997). Psychology of religion: Classic and
contemporary (2nd ed.). New York: John Wiley. ISBN
0471037060.
See also
External links