
Psychology of Religion in the World
Author(s) -
Raymond F. Paloutzian
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
revista pistis and praxis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2175-1838
pISSN - 1984-3755
DOI - 10.7213/2175-1838.09.001.ds01
Subject(s) - psychology of religion , scope (computer science) , attribution , international psychology , field (mathematics) , epistemology , psychology , cultural psychology , asian psychology , sociology , social science , social psychology , critical psychology , philosophy , mathematics , computer science , pure mathematics , programming language
The psychology of religion used to be a small and little known field. Although a few pockets of work in the area were done when Psychology began, it was functionally nonexistent for 1/3 of psychology’s history, and received little attention for most of the rest of it. However, in the past 20 years the field has become vast in scope. It now intersects all subfields of general psychology. Also, the psychology of religion no longer exists only in Western countries. It is now an international field with research being conducted worldwide. This article summarizes this trend and documents psychology of religion in the world and in Brazil as a part of it. The need for a multilevel interdisciplinary approach to research and theory is highlighted, as a way to synthesize knowledge of religiousness cross-culturally and trans-religiously. Future research should invoke a meaningmaking model in order to examine not merely observable religious behaviors, beliefs, or experiences, but their underlying roots, i.e., their meanings and attributions made about them. Such research can help us eliminate barriers between disciplines, cultures, religions, and nations.