Attachment, Evolution, and the Psychology of Religion
Autor Lee A. Kirkpatricken Limba Engleză Hardback – 9 dec 2004
In this provocative and engaging book, Lee Kirkpatrick establishes a broad, comprehensive framework for approaching the psychology of religion from an evolutionary perspective. Within this framework, attachment theory provides a powerful lens through which to reconceptualize diverse aspects of religious belief and behavior. Rejecting the notion that humans possess religion-specific instincts or adaptations, Kirkpatrick argues that religion instead emerges from numerous psychological mechanisms and systems that evolved for other functions. This integrative work will spark discussion, debate, and future research among anyone interested in the psychology of religion, attachment theory, and evolutionary psychology, as well as religious studies. It will also serve as a text in advanced undergraduate and graduate-level courses.
From Lee Kirkpatrick, winner of the APA Division 36 William James Award for outstanding and sustained contributions to the psychology of religion
From Lee Kirkpatrick, winner of the APA Division 36 William James Award for outstanding and sustained contributions to the psychology of religion
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781593850883
ISBN-10: 1593850883
Pagini: 400
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Guilford Publications
Colecția Guilford Press
ISBN-10: 1593850883
Pagini: 400
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Guilford Publications
Colecția Guilford Press
Public țintă
Postgraduate, Professional Practice & Development, and UndergraduateNotă biografică
Lee A. Kirkpatrick, PhD, is Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies in Psychology at the College of William and Mary in Virginia. He has published numerous research articles and book chapters on topics related to adult attachment, the psychology of religion, and evolutionary psychology.
Cuprins
1. Introduction
An Ambitious Agenda
Scientific
Comprehensive
Explanatory
Psychology of ...
Religion
A New Direction
Attachment Theory
Evolutionary Psychology
The Plan of This Book
2. Introduction to Attachment Theory
Backdrop
The Attachment System
Other Related Systems
The Phenomenology of Attachment
Individual Differences in Attachment in Childhood
Multiple Attachment Figures
Internal Working Models and the Stability of Attachment Patterns
Attachment in Adulthood
Attachment and Adult Romantic Relationships
Individual Differences in Adult Romantic Attachment
Factorial and Dimensional Models
The Formation and Development of Adult Love Bonds
An Alternative Approach to Adult Attachment
Attachment and Evolutionary Psychology
Summary and Conclusions
3. God as an Attachment Figure
Religion as Relationship
But Is It Really an Attachment Relationship?
Seeking and Maintaining Proximity to God
Proximity in Belief and Myth
Facilitating Psychological Proximity
Prayer
Other Religious Behaviors
God as a Haven of Safety
Crisis and Distress
Illness and Injury
Death and Grieving
God as a Secure Base
Phenomenology
Psychological Outcomes
Responses to Separation and Loss
Summary and Conclusions
4. More on Religion as an Attachment Process: Some Extensions and Limitations
Religion and Love
What Kind of Love?: Romantic Attachment versus
Attachment to God
God as a Parental Figure
Individual Differences in Images of God
God as a Benevolent Caregiver
God as Controlling and Demanding
Children's Beliefs about God
Beyond God: Extensions and Limitations
To Generalize, or Not to Generalize?
The Problem with Parsimony
Other Forms of Attachment (or Not) in Religion
Relationships with Other Supernatural Beings
Relationships with Religious Leaders
Relationships with Fellow Worshipers and Other Peers
Relationships with Groups
Nontheistic Religions
Summary and Conclusions
5. Individual Differences in Attachment and Religion: The Correspondence Hypothesis
Mental Models and the Correspondence Hypothesis
Correspondence in Childhood and Adolescence
Correspondence in Adulthood
Correspondence Across Cultures
Internal Working Models of Self and Others
Continuity from Childhood to Adulthood
The Socialized-Correspondence Hypothesis
The Two-Level Correspondence Hypothesis
Socialization as an Alternative Explanation
The Inadequacy of Socialization as Explanation
The Epidemiology of Beliefs
Individual Differences Revisited
Summary and Conclusions
6. God as a Substitute Attachment Figure: The Compensation Hypothesis
Individual Differences and Religious Conversion
Individual Differences in Childhood Attachment and Conversion
Sudden Religious Conversion
Other Evidence for a Compensation Model
A Two-Process Model
Individual Differences in Adult Attachment
Contextual Factors in Religious Change
Separation and Loss
Bereavement
Relationship Dissolution
Unavailability of Attachment Figures
Perceived Inadequacy of Human Attachment Figures
Cultural Factors
Summary and Conclusions
7. Attachment in Context: Introduction to Evolutionary Psychology
Evolutionary Psychology as a Paradigm or Metatheory
Adaptation and Natural Selection
Adaptations
Selfish Genes and Inclusive Fitness
Domain-Specificity and the Mental-Organs Model
Nature versus Nurture
Stone Age Minds in Modern Environments
Individual Differences in Evolutionary Context
Stable Environmental Differences
Direct Genetic Effects
Frequency-Dependent Adaptive Strategies
Early Environmental Calibration
An Example of Facultative Strategies: Human Mating
Are Evolutionary Explanations Unfalsifiable?
Some Illustrative Examples: Politics, Music, and Sports
Summary and Conclusions
8. Attachment Theory in Modern Evolutionary Perspective
Childhood Attachment in Modern Evolutionary Perspective
Parental Caregiving and Parent-Offspring Conflict
Individual Differences in Childhood Attachment
Attachment and Reproductive Strategies
The Belsky, Steinberg, and Draper Model
Individual Differences in Adult Attachment
Love Revisited
Love or Attachment?
Love as a Commitment Device
Implications for the Theory of Attachment and Religion
Correspondence and the RS Hypothesis
Compensation, Sudden Conversion, and the LM
Hypothesis
Summary and Conclusions
9. Religion: Adaptation or Evolutionary By-product?
Is There a Unique Religious Instinct?
Universality
Genetics
Neurology
Ethology
Problems with the Religion-as-Instinct View
The Problem of Identifying the Adaptive Function
Psychological vs. Reproductive Benefits
Group Selection vs. Selfish Genes
Costs vs. Benefits
Begging Questions
The Problem of Identifying the Design
The Problem of Establishing Special Design
Theoretical Conservatism and the Onus of Proof
Religion as an Evolutionary By-product, Not an Adaptation
Adaptations vs. Evolutionary By-products
Religion as an Evolutionary By-product
An Analogy: Games and Sports
Summary and Conclusions
10. Beyond Attachment: Religion and Other Evolved Psychological Mechanisms
Power, Status, and Intrasexual Competition
Supernatural Beings as Power Figures
Human Religious Leaders as Power Figures
Kinship
Supernatural Beings and Religious Leaders as Kin
Ingroup Members as Kin
Reciprocal Altruism and Social Exchange
Supernatural Beings as Social-Exchange Partners
Mutual Helping and Social Support
Morality and Ethics
Coalitional Psychology
In-Group Cooperation and Morality
Out-Group Discrimination and Conflict
Supernatural Beings as Coalitional Partners
Summary and Conclusions
11. The Cognitive Origins of Religious Belief
Evolved Mechanisms for Thinking about the Natural World
Naive Physics and Psychological Animism
Naive Biology and Natural Kinds
Naive Psychology and Theory of Mind
The Psychology of Complex Thinking: How the Mind Works
The Cognitive Building Blocks of Religious Belief
Animism
Psychological Essentialism
Anthropomorphism
Why Religious Beliefs Succeed
Evolved Psychological Mechanisms: Calibration and Bias
Religious Beliefs: Combining the Intuitive and the Counterintuitive
Beyond Religion: Other Forms of Thought and Belief
Parapsychology and Other Supernatural Beliefs
Commonsense Knowledge and Reasoning in Everyday Life
Science
Summary and Conclusions
12. Beyond Genes: Learning, Rationality, and Culture
Natural Selection, Genes, and Inclusive Fitness
From Genes to Memes
Individual Learning, Reinforcement, and the Pleasure Principle
Complex Reasoning and Higher-Order Cognitive Processes
Social Learning, Socialization, and Cultural Transmission
Cooperation, Competition, and Manipulation
Memes and Viruses of the Mind
Science Revisited
Summary and Conclusions
13. Toward an Evolutionary Psychology of Religion
A Précis in (More or Less) Reverse
Evolutionary Psychology and Adaptation
From Genes to Behavior
Religion as an Evolutionary Byproduct
The Psychological Origins of Religious Belief
The Social Psychology of the Supernatural
Conclusion
An Evolutionary Psychology of Religion for the Future
A Theoretically Rich Psychology of ...
A Paradigmatic, Interdisciplinary Science
A Coherent Model of Universality vs. Individual Differences
Beyond Description to Function
Religious Nature Carved at its Joints
Avoiding Major Pitfalls in the Psychology of Religion
Summary and Conclusions
An Ambitious Agenda
Scientific
Comprehensive
Explanatory
Psychology of ...
Religion
A New Direction
Attachment Theory
Evolutionary Psychology
The Plan of This Book
2. Introduction to Attachment Theory
Backdrop
The Attachment System
Other Related Systems
The Phenomenology of Attachment
Individual Differences in Attachment in Childhood
Multiple Attachment Figures
Internal Working Models and the Stability of Attachment Patterns
Attachment in Adulthood
Attachment and Adult Romantic Relationships
Individual Differences in Adult Romantic Attachment
Factorial and Dimensional Models
The Formation and Development of Adult Love Bonds
An Alternative Approach to Adult Attachment
Attachment and Evolutionary Psychology
Summary and Conclusions
3. God as an Attachment Figure
Religion as Relationship
But Is It Really an Attachment Relationship?
Seeking and Maintaining Proximity to God
Proximity in Belief and Myth
Facilitating Psychological Proximity
Prayer
Other Religious Behaviors
God as a Haven of Safety
Crisis and Distress
Illness and Injury
Death and Grieving
God as a Secure Base
Phenomenology
Psychological Outcomes
Responses to Separation and Loss
Summary and Conclusions
4. More on Religion as an Attachment Process: Some Extensions and Limitations
Religion and Love
What Kind of Love?: Romantic Attachment versus
Attachment to God
God as a Parental Figure
Individual Differences in Images of God
God as a Benevolent Caregiver
God as Controlling and Demanding
Children's Beliefs about God
Beyond God: Extensions and Limitations
To Generalize, or Not to Generalize?
The Problem with Parsimony
Other Forms of Attachment (or Not) in Religion
Relationships with Other Supernatural Beings
Relationships with Religious Leaders
Relationships with Fellow Worshipers and Other Peers
Relationships with Groups
Nontheistic Religions
Summary and Conclusions
5. Individual Differences in Attachment and Religion: The Correspondence Hypothesis
Mental Models and the Correspondence Hypothesis
Correspondence in Childhood and Adolescence
Correspondence in Adulthood
Correspondence Across Cultures
Internal Working Models of Self and Others
Continuity from Childhood to Adulthood
The Socialized-Correspondence Hypothesis
The Two-Level Correspondence Hypothesis
Socialization as an Alternative Explanation
The Inadequacy of Socialization as Explanation
The Epidemiology of Beliefs
Individual Differences Revisited
Summary and Conclusions
6. God as a Substitute Attachment Figure: The Compensation Hypothesis
Individual Differences and Religious Conversion
Individual Differences in Childhood Attachment and Conversion
Sudden Religious Conversion
Other Evidence for a Compensation Model
A Two-Process Model
Individual Differences in Adult Attachment
Contextual Factors in Religious Change
Separation and Loss
Bereavement
Relationship Dissolution
Unavailability of Attachment Figures
Perceived Inadequacy of Human Attachment Figures
Cultural Factors
Summary and Conclusions
7. Attachment in Context: Introduction to Evolutionary Psychology
Evolutionary Psychology as a Paradigm or Metatheory
Adaptation and Natural Selection
Adaptations
Selfish Genes and Inclusive Fitness
Domain-Specificity and the Mental-Organs Model
Nature versus Nurture
Stone Age Minds in Modern Environments
Individual Differences in Evolutionary Context
Stable Environmental Differences
Direct Genetic Effects
Frequency-Dependent Adaptive Strategies
Early Environmental Calibration
An Example of Facultative Strategies: Human Mating
Are Evolutionary Explanations Unfalsifiable?
Some Illustrative Examples: Politics, Music, and Sports
Summary and Conclusions
8. Attachment Theory in Modern Evolutionary Perspective
Childhood Attachment in Modern Evolutionary Perspective
Parental Caregiving and Parent-Offspring Conflict
Individual Differences in Childhood Attachment
Attachment and Reproductive Strategies
The Belsky, Steinberg, and Draper Model
Individual Differences in Adult Attachment
Love Revisited
Love or Attachment?
Love as a Commitment Device
Implications for the Theory of Attachment and Religion
Correspondence and the RS Hypothesis
Compensation, Sudden Conversion, and the LM
Hypothesis
Summary and Conclusions
9. Religion: Adaptation or Evolutionary By-product?
Is There a Unique Religious Instinct?
Universality
Genetics
Neurology
Ethology
Problems with the Religion-as-Instinct View
The Problem of Identifying the Adaptive Function
Psychological vs. Reproductive Benefits
Group Selection vs. Selfish Genes
Costs vs. Benefits
Begging Questions
The Problem of Identifying the Design
The Problem of Establishing Special Design
Theoretical Conservatism and the Onus of Proof
Religion as an Evolutionary By-product, Not an Adaptation
Adaptations vs. Evolutionary By-products
Religion as an Evolutionary By-product
An Analogy: Games and Sports
Summary and Conclusions
10. Beyond Attachment: Religion and Other Evolved Psychological Mechanisms
Power, Status, and Intrasexual Competition
Supernatural Beings as Power Figures
Human Religious Leaders as Power Figures
Kinship
Supernatural Beings and Religious Leaders as Kin
Ingroup Members as Kin
Reciprocal Altruism and Social Exchange
Supernatural Beings as Social-Exchange Partners
Mutual Helping and Social Support
Morality and Ethics
Coalitional Psychology
In-Group Cooperation and Morality
Out-Group Discrimination and Conflict
Supernatural Beings as Coalitional Partners
Summary and Conclusions
11. The Cognitive Origins of Religious Belief
Evolved Mechanisms for Thinking about the Natural World
Naive Physics and Psychological Animism
Naive Biology and Natural Kinds
Naive Psychology and Theory of Mind
The Psychology of Complex Thinking: How the Mind Works
The Cognitive Building Blocks of Religious Belief
Animism
Psychological Essentialism
Anthropomorphism
Why Religious Beliefs Succeed
Evolved Psychological Mechanisms: Calibration and Bias
Religious Beliefs: Combining the Intuitive and the Counterintuitive
Beyond Religion: Other Forms of Thought and Belief
Parapsychology and Other Supernatural Beliefs
Commonsense Knowledge and Reasoning in Everyday Life
Science
Summary and Conclusions
12. Beyond Genes: Learning, Rationality, and Culture
Natural Selection, Genes, and Inclusive Fitness
From Genes to Memes
Individual Learning, Reinforcement, and the Pleasure Principle
Complex Reasoning and Higher-Order Cognitive Processes
Social Learning, Socialization, and Cultural Transmission
Cooperation, Competition, and Manipulation
Memes and Viruses of the Mind
Science Revisited
Summary and Conclusions
13. Toward an Evolutionary Psychology of Religion
A Précis in (More or Less) Reverse
Evolutionary Psychology and Adaptation
From Genes to Behavior
Religion as an Evolutionary Byproduct
The Psychological Origins of Religious Belief
The Social Psychology of the Supernatural
Conclusion
An Evolutionary Psychology of Religion for the Future
A Theoretically Rich Psychology of ...
A Paradigmatic, Interdisciplinary Science
A Coherent Model of Universality vs. Individual Differences
Beyond Description to Function
Religious Nature Carved at its Joints
Avoiding Major Pitfalls in the Psychology of Religion
Summary and Conclusions
Recenzii
In this highly engaging, wide-ranging, and gracefully written book, Kirkpatrick moves from his own innovative work on attachment processes and religious phenomena to a much broader, multidimensional analysis of religion as an outcome of evolution. The book stands out from other writings on evolution and religion, which tend to have a narrow focus (on cognition or ritual or mystical experience, for example) and to see religion as a unitary adaptation. In contrast, Kirkpatrick argues persuasively that religion is best explained by a confluence of several different evolved mechanisms, each with its own primary, nonreligious function.--Phillip R. Shaver, PhD, Department of Psychology, University of California, Davis
Kirkpatrick has provided a dazzling and insightful analysis of the psychology of religion. Groundbreaking and gripping from start to finish, the book takes readers on a tour of religious phenomena, from the origins of belief to the nature of religious leaders and their followers. The result is the most incisive and scientifically sound analysis of religion I have seen, using principles drawn from modern evolutionary psychology. It’s a landmark publication, and sure to form the center of lively debate for years to come.--David M. Buss, PhD, Department of Psychology, University of Texas at Austin
In this brilliant work, Lee Kirkpatrick embeds the study of religion within an integrative evolutionary framework that draws extensively on attachment theory. In elaborating his comprehensive explanatory theory, Kirkpatrick boldly proposes a route for advancing the science of the psychology of religion. This book is essential reading for students and scholars of the psychology of religion and evolutionary psychology, particularly those interested in the psychological origins of religion.--Crystal L. Park, PhD, Department of Psychology, University of Connecticut
This is a masterful example of scholarship aimed at integrating an attachment and evolutionary theoretical approach to the wide and far-reaching domain of the psychology of religion. Kirkpatrick is the world’s leading expert on attachment theory and religion, and in this book he has expanded the argument to encompass a broader perspective, one that places the psychology of religion squarely in the emerging field of evolutionary psychology and thus links it with the larger orbit of sciences. The writing is rich with research whose data argue in a compelling way that religious phenomena match the predictions of an attachment-evolutionary framework. Other approaches are acknowledged but are challenged with the question of why they work, if they do. Written with a high level of sophistication, the book is nonetheless extremely accessible. Kirkpatrick clearly loves his material. His logic is keen, his writing beautiful, his topic and message timeless.--Raymond F. Paloutzian, PhD, Department of Psychology, Westmont College
-Kirkpatrick has provided a dazzling and insightful analysis of the psychology of religion. Groundbreaking and gripping from start to finish, the book takes readers on a tour of religious phenomena, from the origins of belief to the nature of religious leaders and their followers. The result is the most incisive and scientifically sound analysis of religion I have seen, using principles drawn from modern evolutionary psychology. It’s a landmark publication, and sure to form the center of lively debate for years to come.--David M. Buss, PhD, Department of Psychology, University of Texas at Austin
In this brilliant work, Lee Kirkpatrick embeds the study of religion within an integrative evolutionary framework that draws extensively on attachment theory. In elaborating his comprehensive explanatory theory, Kirkpatrick boldly proposes a route for advancing the science of the psychology of religion. This book is essential reading for students and scholars of the psychology of religion and evolutionary psychology, particularly those interested in the psychological origins of religion.--Crystal L. Park, PhD, Department of Psychology, University of Connecticut
This is a masterful example of scholarship aimed at integrating an attachment and evolutionary theoretical approach to the wide and far-reaching domain of the psychology of religion. Kirkpatrick is the world’s leading expert on attachment theory and religion, and in this book he has expanded the argument to encompass a broader perspective, one that places the psychology of religion squarely in the emerging field of evolutionary psychology and thus links it with the larger orbit of sciences. The writing is rich with research whose data argue in a compelling way that religious phenomena match the predictions of an attachment-evolutionary framework. Other approaches are acknowledged but are challenged with the question of why they work, if they do. Written with a high level of sophistication, the book is nonetheless extremely accessible. Kirkpatrick clearly loves his material. His logic is keen, his writing beautiful, his topic and message timeless.--Raymond F. Paloutzian, PhD, Department of Psychology, Westmont College
Descriere
In this provocative and engaging book, Lee Kirkpatrick establishes a broad, comprehensive framework for approaching the psychology of religion from an evolutionary perspective. Within this framework, attachment theory provides a powerful lens through which to reconceptualize diverse aspects of religious belief and behavior. Rejecting the notion that humans possess religion-specific instincts or adaptations, Kirkpatrick argues that religion instead emerges from numerous psychological mechanisms and systems that evolved for other functions. This integrative work will spark discussion, debate, and future research among anyone interested in the psychology of religion, attachment theory, and evolutionary psychology, as well as religious studies. It will also serve as a text in advanced undergraduate and graduate-level courses.
From Lee Kirkpatrick, winner of the APA Division 36 William James Award for outstanding and sustained contributions to the psychology of religion
From Lee Kirkpatrick, winner of the APA Division 36 William James Award for outstanding and sustained contributions to the psychology of religion