Integrating Psychotherapy and Spirituality

Why “integrating” psychotherapy and spirituality?  This question seems silly to many people for one of two reasons.  Some would say it is silly because the two must necessarily be kept separate, like church and state.  Others would say it is silly because they are inherently intertwined and don’t require any effort on our part to be integrated.

I am inclined toward the view that the two are inherently intertwined, but believe that they have been artificially separated by psychology, the discipline that most clearly undergirds most of what we practice in psychotherapy, in its zeal to be scientific.  Freud’s disdain for religion didn’t help either.  Of course there have always been those, like Carl Jung, who have kept alive the perspective that psychology and psychotherapy have an intrinsic relationship to spirituality.  However, this perspective has only moved toward widespread acceptance among psychotherapists in the last few decades, thanks in part to the Journal of Humanistic Psychology, and the Journal of Transpersonal Psychology.  Such acceptance in mainstream psychology, as reflected in the American Psychological Association, has only been noticeable in the last few years.

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How to Get the Very Latest Psychology Dictionary That is Available

Psychology is the study of human nature. It is the field where our behavior, emotions and our reactions to various situations are studied and explored in an effort to understand the human being. The field of psychology draws many people from all walks of life that have this desire to know what makes a person act the way they do. While they may speak in many languages a psychology dictionary makes the various terms that are used readily available for all.

You can access this psychology dictionary even if you are not a trained psychologist or even a student of psychology. The various psychology branches have their own definitions and terms of course and they all have access to a psychology dictionary that fits their field. You can however find a psychology dictionary that covers the entire range of psychological terms from every single psychology branch.

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Psychological Egoism as a Logical Conclusion

From here, I will sketch my own ideas about psychological egoism before going to the of Feinberg’s objections.

Psychological egoism merely says that we, as human beings, always do what is initially better for us. Actually, it means that we never act the way out of our best interest or what we are convinced to be so. The most controversial item of defending psychological egoism is the following: even though people can find pleasing to do what they do, can we state that these people are motivated only by the pleasure they get doing what they do?

Nothingstanding to the complaint that psychological egoists are able to make any fact fit their theory, I am sure that the theory of psychological egoism itself can be proven in practice. And the proof is hidden in the single question, “Why?”

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