神学家心理科学入门

Justin L. Barrett
{"title":"神学家心理科学入门","authors":"Justin L. Barrett","doi":"10.56315/pscf9-23barrett","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"THEOPSYCH: A Psychological Science Primer for Theologians by Justin L. Barrett. Blueprint 1543, 2022. 176 pages. Paperback; $19.15. ISBN: 9798985852004. Also, free download at https://blueprint1543.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/TheoPsych-PDF.pdf. *It is not often that one finds a book about construction written by a psychologist. However, Justin Barrett's TheoPsych is just that. The author imagines the theologian as a master palace builder in need of a collection of specialized materials and knowledgeable artisans to do specific modular work for the larger project. TheoPsych serves as a \"specs sheet\" for the potential contributions psychological science can bring to the project. The manuscript is designed not only to serve the interested contemporary theologian who already desires this input, but even more so, it seeks to convince the suspicious or disinterested theologian of the usefulness of the discipline. As such, \"bridge builder\" seems an equally fitting metaphor. In any event, intellectual efforts which suggest a unity of truth come freighted with hope for this reader because of the potential they hold to generate cross-disciplinary clarity. *Descriptively, the book features five chapters, the first of which argues for the theologian's need of psychological science, distinguishes it from the more general and potentially misleading term \"psychology,\" and seeks to help the inquisitive theologian identify the types of questions in which the psychological sciences will be useful. Here, as in other parts of the text, Barrett gives form to the points being made by posing insightful example questions. For instance, \"Why does it often seem so hard for people to grasp and hold onto the idea of Grace?\" (p. 13).1 *Chapter 2 further defines the psychological sciences by way of a quick trip through the history of experimental psychology, notes the mindset of the scientific psychologist (i.e., curious and skeptical), describes the demographically relevant features of this community of scholars, and briefly catalogs the various types of materials produced by its professionals. Additional care is taken to delineate the organizational structure of empirical papers and to clarify important discipline-specific terms such as evidence, hypotheses, effects, and effect sizes. *The third and largest chapter of the book maps out the many areas and subdisciplines the field has to offer. These include the biological basis for behavior, social psychology, personality psychology, cognitive psychology and cognitive science (it's more interdisciplinary cousin), developmental psychology, and a few others. The relative bulk of this chapter reflects space allotted within each area to draw out particular lines of research relevant for use in interdisciplinary collaboration. As in other sections, Barrett never strays too far from the book's stated aim, to serve the integrative needs of the interested theologian. *Interestingly, it is not until the penultimate chapter that implications related to emerging new paradigms and overarching themes are brought to the foreground. It opens with a description of the recent emergence of positive psychology and the current emphasis placed on cognitive anthropology and cultural evolution. These areas are followed by a section on evolutionary and comparative psychology. The chapter concludes with religion itself as a topic of study as viewed from four different vantage points: psychology, cognitive science, evolutionary studies, and neuroscience. *The last and briefest chapter addresses the thorny issue of methodological naturalism, noting its necessity to avoid supernatural explanations but also lamenting its inability to settle contentions regarding the relationship between human behavior and overarching metaphysical questions. This chapter also speaks to the problem of reductionism, arguing that psychological scientists oftentimes attack their topics of interest reductively. While acknowledging that many then blithely imply ontological reductionism in their interpretations, nonetheless Barrett suggests that \"... most good psychologists do not forget the whole\" (p. 140). The book concludes with one more call for theologians to incorporate the findings of psychological science into their work. *Evaluatively, the book has much to offer, including a very expeditious yet effective pathway forged through this broad and corrugated discipline. Additionally, the chosen areas of elaboration seem appropriate and properly suggestive of potential cross-disciplinary alignment. Complementing the helpful exemplar questions peppered throughout the summary sections are several text boxes highlighting examples of existing cross-disciplinary activity. For instance, one side-bar discussion features the work of theologian Christopher Woznicki, who argues that concepts in cognitive psychology can be used to better give an account of the theological notion of perichoresis (pp. 81-82). Most importantly, the author's genuine desire to stimulate interdisciplinary collaboration readily seeps through the pages. Barrett has built a strong and winsome case suggesting theologians willing to interact with the psychological sciences will be well served in doing so. *The most substantial drawback has to do with what has been left out, namely, the soft underbelly of the discipline. For instance, there was no mention of the replication crisis now plaguing the psychological sciences.2 Readers should be aware that there are challenging measurement difficulties that sit at the foundation of all scientific pursuits, especially those that aspire to contend with concepts such as anxiety, emotion, personality, and attachment. *Furthermore, although the book offers many helpful definitions, two critical ones were found missing. One is the construct of religion. The default post-enlightenment understanding is far from clear and directive when made the focus of study.3 The other is science itself. In addition to enduring definitional challenges regarding both the term as a method and as a body of knowledge, there are also important sociological aspects of the concept that merit mentioning. That is, science as a community; a community that can succumb to the same \"groupish\" tendencies found in all social networks. *A more complete historical account would serve to support the \"science as community\" omission noted above. Perhaps outsiders should be made aware that the history of psychology is more than a clean handoff from Wundt to Watson to the modern psychological scientist. Freud, for instance, was dogmatic in claiming his system of psychoanalysis was anchored in the natural sciences.4 But there were also the Functionalists and the Gestaltists--the \"physics-minded\" Gestaltists offering a nonreductionistic paradigm, by the way. Readers should know that psychological science has been governed by many paradigms over the past 150 years, each of them being considered properly scientific by their advocates. *There is also no mention of some rather dubious attempts by psychological scientists in the past to directly address (i.e., correct) theological concepts,5 including offerings of updated understanding of Jesus in light of modern psychology.6 In one sense there may be good reason for their omission. These bygone works reside firmly in history's dustbin, and unlike these previous efforts, TheoPsych is not trying to \"do\" theology, rather it is merely offering its services passively. Nonetheless, an acknowledgment of and distinction between this history and the current project might serve to allay any misgivings a historically informed reader might have, especially when sections of TheoPsych could be interpreted as being somewhat assertive (e.g., Various Sciences of \"Religion,\" pp. 126-35). Greater lengths should be taken to avoid any impression that this is the work of a missionary from the land of facts sent to enlighten the backward residents of faith. *Finally, there is the influence of the current paradigm. The most popular option is evolutionary psychology. This approach is noted in the book; the promise of interesting connections being forged with biology, cultural studies, and anthropology is properly identified as clearly worthy of continued exploration. However, this is the third attempt to tie the science of human behavior to biological evolution, the first two (eugenics and sociobiology) having left a rather embarrassing legacy.7 Evolutionary psychology has several major problems, and they are not particularly helped when partnered with the evolution of culture.8 *In summary, this book would better serve collaborative efforts if the picture presented within were not so nice and tidy. In the long run, brutally transparent portrayals will be needed from all collaborators if there is to be hope for building cross-disciplinary theoretical structures that bring us closer to truth. Despite these criticisms, TheoPsych is unquestionably an impressive and important offering, one that is well positioned to advance the essential work of cultivating interdisciplinary syntheses. Now, if only more folk in the social sciences would care to understand what theology has to offer them. *Notes *1For example, Adam S. Hodge et al., \"Experiencing Grace: A Review of the Empirical Literature,\" The Journal of Positive Psychology 17, no. 3 (2022): 375-88, https:/doi.org/10.1080/17439760.2020.1858943. Also, see K. I. Pargament and J. J. Exline, Working with Spiritual Struggles in Psychotherapy: From Research to Practice (New York: Guilford Press, 2021), https://www.guilford.com/books/Working-with-Spiritual-Struggles-in-Psychotherapy/Pargament-Exline/9781462524310/contents. *2J. P. Ioannidis, \"Why most published research findings are false,\" PLoS Medicine 2, no. 8 (2005): e124, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0020124. Erratum in PLoS Medicine 19, no. 8 (2022): e1004085. *3Peter Harrison, The Territories of Science and Religion (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2015). *4Sigmund Freud, \"Some Elementary Lessons in Psychoanalysis,\" in The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, ed. James Strachey (London: Hogarth Press, 1940). *5Raymond B. Cattell, Beyondism: Religion from Science (New York: Praeger Publishers, 1987). *6Granville Stanley Hall, Jesus, the Christ in the Light of Psychology (New York: Doubleday, 1917). *7Paul A. Lombardo, Three Generations, No Imbeciles: Eugenics, the Supreme Court, and Buck v. Bell (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2022). *8Edwin E. Gantt and Richard N. Williams, \"The Triumph of the Will: Evolutionary Psychology and the Conceptual Incoherence of Enhancement,\" Journal of Humanistic Psychology 62, no. 5 (2020), https://doi.org/10.1177/0022167819899009. *Reviewed by Paul Nesselroade, Professor of Psychology and Honors Program Director, Asbury University, Wilmore, KY 40390.","PeriodicalId":53927,"journal":{"name":"Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Theopsych: A Psychological Science Primer for Theologians\",\"authors\":\"Justin L. Barrett\",\"doi\":\"10.56315/pscf9-23barrett\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"THEOPSYCH: A Psychological Science Primer for Theologians by Justin L. Barrett. Blueprint 1543, 2022. 176 pages. Paperback; $19.15. ISBN: 9798985852004. Also, free download at https://blueprint1543.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/TheoPsych-PDF.pdf. *It is not often that one finds a book about construction written by a psychologist. However, Justin Barrett's TheoPsych is just that. The author imagines the theologian as a master palace builder in need of a collection of specialized materials and knowledgeable artisans to do specific modular work for the larger project. TheoPsych serves as a \\\"specs sheet\\\" for the potential contributions psychological science can bring to the project. The manuscript is designed not only to serve the interested contemporary theologian who already desires this input, but even more so, it seeks to convince the suspicious or disinterested theologian of the usefulness of the discipline. As such, \\\"bridge builder\\\" seems an equally fitting metaphor. In any event, intellectual efforts which suggest a unity of truth come freighted with hope for this reader because of the potential they hold to generate cross-disciplinary clarity. *Descriptively, the book features five chapters, the first of which argues for the theologian's need of psychological science, distinguishes it from the more general and potentially misleading term \\\"psychology,\\\" and seeks to help the inquisitive theologian identify the types of questions in which the psychological sciences will be useful. Here, as in other parts of the text, Barrett gives form to the points being made by posing insightful example questions. For instance, \\\"Why does it often seem so hard for people to grasp and hold onto the idea of Grace?\\\" (p. 13).1 *Chapter 2 further defines the psychological sciences by way of a quick trip through the history of experimental psychology, notes the mindset of the scientific psychologist (i.e., curious and skeptical), describes the demographically relevant features of this community of scholars, and briefly catalogs the various types of materials produced by its professionals. Additional care is taken to delineate the organizational structure of empirical papers and to clarify important discipline-specific terms such as evidence, hypotheses, effects, and effect sizes. *The third and largest chapter of the book maps out the many areas and subdisciplines the field has to offer. These include the biological basis for behavior, social psychology, personality psychology, cognitive psychology and cognitive science (it's more interdisciplinary cousin), developmental psychology, and a few others. The relative bulk of this chapter reflects space allotted within each area to draw out particular lines of research relevant for use in interdisciplinary collaboration. As in other sections, Barrett never strays too far from the book's stated aim, to serve the integrative needs of the interested theologian. *Interestingly, it is not until the penultimate chapter that implications related to emerging new paradigms and overarching themes are brought to the foreground. It opens with a description of the recent emergence of positive psychology and the current emphasis placed on cognitive anthropology and cultural evolution. These areas are followed by a section on evolutionary and comparative psychology. The chapter concludes with religion itself as a topic of study as viewed from four different vantage points: psychology, cognitive science, evolutionary studies, and neuroscience. *The last and briefest chapter addresses the thorny issue of methodological naturalism, noting its necessity to avoid supernatural explanations but also lamenting its inability to settle contentions regarding the relationship between human behavior and overarching metaphysical questions. This chapter also speaks to the problem of reductionism, arguing that psychological scientists oftentimes attack their topics of interest reductively. While acknowledging that many then blithely imply ontological reductionism in their interpretations, nonetheless Barrett suggests that \\\"... most good psychologists do not forget the whole\\\" (p. 140). The book concludes with one more call for theologians to incorporate the findings of psychological science into their work. *Evaluatively, the book has much to offer, including a very expeditious yet effective pathway forged through this broad and corrugated discipline. Additionally, the chosen areas of elaboration seem appropriate and properly suggestive of potential cross-disciplinary alignment. Complementing the helpful exemplar questions peppered throughout the summary sections are several text boxes highlighting examples of existing cross-disciplinary activity. For instance, one side-bar discussion features the work of theologian Christopher Woznicki, who argues that concepts in cognitive psychology can be used to better give an account of the theological notion of perichoresis (pp. 81-82). Most importantly, the author's genuine desire to stimulate interdisciplinary collaboration readily seeps through the pages. Barrett has built a strong and winsome case suggesting theologians willing to interact with the psychological sciences will be well served in doing so. *The most substantial drawback has to do with what has been left out, namely, the soft underbelly of the discipline. For instance, there was no mention of the replication crisis now plaguing the psychological sciences.2 Readers should be aware that there are challenging measurement difficulties that sit at the foundation of all scientific pursuits, especially those that aspire to contend with concepts such as anxiety, emotion, personality, and attachment. *Furthermore, although the book offers many helpful definitions, two critical ones were found missing. One is the construct of religion. The default post-enlightenment understanding is far from clear and directive when made the focus of study.3 The other is science itself. In addition to enduring definitional challenges regarding both the term as a method and as a body of knowledge, there are also important sociological aspects of the concept that merit mentioning. That is, science as a community; a community that can succumb to the same \\\"groupish\\\" tendencies found in all social networks. *A more complete historical account would serve to support the \\\"science as community\\\" omission noted above. Perhaps outsiders should be made aware that the history of psychology is more than a clean handoff from Wundt to Watson to the modern psychological scientist. Freud, for instance, was dogmatic in claiming his system of psychoanalysis was anchored in the natural sciences.4 But there were also the Functionalists and the Gestaltists--the \\\"physics-minded\\\" Gestaltists offering a nonreductionistic paradigm, by the way. Readers should know that psychological science has been governed by many paradigms over the past 150 years, each of them being considered properly scientific by their advocates. *There is also no mention of some rather dubious attempts by psychological scientists in the past to directly address (i.e., correct) theological concepts,5 including offerings of updated understanding of Jesus in light of modern psychology.6 In one sense there may be good reason for their omission. These bygone works reside firmly in history's dustbin, and unlike these previous efforts, TheoPsych is not trying to \\\"do\\\" theology, rather it is merely offering its services passively. Nonetheless, an acknowledgment of and distinction between this history and the current project might serve to allay any misgivings a historically informed reader might have, especially when sections of TheoPsych could be interpreted as being somewhat assertive (e.g., Various Sciences of \\\"Religion,\\\" pp. 126-35). Greater lengths should be taken to avoid any impression that this is the work of a missionary from the land of facts sent to enlighten the backward residents of faith. *Finally, there is the influence of the current paradigm. The most popular option is evolutionary psychology. This approach is noted in the book; the promise of interesting connections being forged with biology, cultural studies, and anthropology is properly identified as clearly worthy of continued exploration. However, this is the third attempt to tie the science of human behavior to biological evolution, the first two (eugenics and sociobiology) having left a rather embarrassing legacy.7 Evolutionary psychology has several major problems, and they are not particularly helped when partnered with the evolution of culture.8 *In summary, this book would better serve collaborative efforts if the picture presented within were not so nice and tidy. In the long run, brutally transparent portrayals will be needed from all collaborators if there is to be hope for building cross-disciplinary theoretical structures that bring us closer to truth. Despite these criticisms, TheoPsych is unquestionably an impressive and important offering, one that is well positioned to advance the essential work of cultivating interdisciplinary syntheses. Now, if only more folk in the social sciences would care to understand what theology has to offer them. *Notes *1For example, Adam S. Hodge et al., \\\"Experiencing Grace: A Review of the Empirical Literature,\\\" The Journal of Positive Psychology 17, no. 3 (2022): 375-88, https:/doi.org/10.1080/17439760.2020.1858943. Also, see K. I. Pargament and J. J. Exline, Working with Spiritual Struggles in Psychotherapy: From Research to Practice (New York: Guilford Press, 2021), https://www.guilford.com/books/Working-with-Spiritual-Struggles-in-Psychotherapy/Pargament-Exline/9781462524310/contents. *2J. P. Ioannidis, \\\"Why most published research findings are false,\\\" PLoS Medicine 2, no. 8 (2005): e124, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0020124. Erratum in PLoS Medicine 19, no. 8 (2022): e1004085. *3Peter Harrison, The Territories of Science and Religion (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2015). *4Sigmund Freud, \\\"Some Elementary Lessons in Psychoanalysis,\\\" in The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, ed. James Strachey (London: Hogarth Press, 1940). *5Raymond B. Cattell, Beyondism: Religion from Science (New York: Praeger Publishers, 1987). *6Granville Stanley Hall, Jesus, the Christ in the Light of Psychology (New York: Doubleday, 1917). *7Paul A. Lombardo, Three Generations, No Imbeciles: Eugenics, the Supreme Court, and Buck v. Bell (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2022). *8Edwin E. Gantt and Richard N. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

《神学家心理科学入门》,贾斯汀·l·巴雷特著。蓝图1543,2022。176页。平装书;19.15美元。ISBN: 9798985852004。也可以在https://blueprint1543.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/TheoPsych-PDF.pdf免费下载。*很少有人能找到一本心理学家写的关于建筑的书。然而,贾斯汀·巴雷特的《TheoPsych》正是如此。作者把神学家想象成一个宫殿建造大师,需要收集专门的材料和知识渊博的工匠,为更大的项目做具体的模块化工作。TheoPsych作为一份“规格表”,说明心理科学可以为项目带来的潜在贡献。手稿的设计不仅是为了服务于感兴趣的当代神学家,他们已经渴望这种输入,但更重要的是,它试图说服怀疑或不感兴趣的神学家的有用性的学科。因此,“桥梁建设者”似乎是一个同样合适的比喻。无论如何,暗示真理统一的智力努力给读者带来了希望,因为它们具有产生跨学科清晰度的潜力。*从描述上讲,这本书有五章特色,第一章论述了神学家对心理科学的需要,将其与更一般和潜在的误导性术语“心理学”区分开来,并试图帮助好奇的神学家识别心理科学将有用的问题类型。在这里,就像在文章的其他部分一样,巴雷特通过提出有见地的范例问题来形成观点。例如,“为什么人们总是很难理解和坚持恩典的概念?”(13页)。1 *第2章通过快速浏览实验心理学的历史进一步定义了心理科学,注意到科学心理学家的心态(即好奇和怀疑),描述了这一学者群体的人口学相关特征,并简要地编目了由其专业人员制作的各种类型的材料。额外的注意被用来描述实证论文的组织结构,并澄清重要的学科特定术语,如证据、假设、效应和效应大小。*本书的第三章也是最大的一章描绘了该领域必须提供的许多领域和分支学科。这些包括行为的生物学基础,社会心理学,人格心理学,认知心理学和认知科学(它是跨学科的表亲),发展心理学,还有一些其他的。本章的相对大部分反映了在每个领域内分配的空间,以绘制与跨学科合作使用相关的特定研究线。正如在其他部分一样,巴雷特从未偏离本书的既定目标太远,以满足感兴趣的神学家的综合需求。有趣的是,直到倒数第二章,与新兴的新范式和总体主题相关的含义才被提到前台。它首先描述了最近出现的积极心理学,以及当前对认知人类学和文化进化的重视。这些领域之后是关于进化和比较心理学的部分。本章最后以宗教本身作为一个研究主题,从四个不同的有利角度来看:心理学、认知科学、进化研究和神经科学。*最后也是最简短的一章解决了方法论自然主义的棘手问题,注意到它必须避免超自然的解释,但也哀叹它无法解决关于人类行为与总体形而上学问题之间关系的争论。本章还讨论了还原论的问题,认为心理科学家经常以还原论的方式攻击他们感兴趣的话题。虽然巴雷特承认许多人在他们的解释中轻率地暗示了本体论还原论,但他认为“……大多数优秀的心理学家不会忘记全部”(第140页)。这本书最后又呼吁神学家将心理科学的发现融入到他们的工作中。*评价上,这本书提供了很多东西,包括一个非常快速而有效的途径,通过这个广泛而混乱的学科。此外,所选择的细化领域似乎是适当的,并适当地暗示了潜在的跨学科合作。在总结部分穿插的有用的范例问题之外,还有几个突出显示现有跨学科活动示例的文本框。例如,一个侧边栏的讨论以神学家Christopher Woznicki的作品为特色,他认为认知心理学中的概念可以用来更好地解释心包的神学概念(第81-82页)。
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Theopsych: A Psychological Science Primer for Theologians
THEOPSYCH: A Psychological Science Primer for Theologians by Justin L. Barrett. Blueprint 1543, 2022. 176 pages. Paperback; $19.15. ISBN: 9798985852004. Also, free download at https://blueprint1543.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/TheoPsych-PDF.pdf. *It is not often that one finds a book about construction written by a psychologist. However, Justin Barrett's TheoPsych is just that. The author imagines the theologian as a master palace builder in need of a collection of specialized materials and knowledgeable artisans to do specific modular work for the larger project. TheoPsych serves as a "specs sheet" for the potential contributions psychological science can bring to the project. The manuscript is designed not only to serve the interested contemporary theologian who already desires this input, but even more so, it seeks to convince the suspicious or disinterested theologian of the usefulness of the discipline. As such, "bridge builder" seems an equally fitting metaphor. In any event, intellectual efforts which suggest a unity of truth come freighted with hope for this reader because of the potential they hold to generate cross-disciplinary clarity. *Descriptively, the book features five chapters, the first of which argues for the theologian's need of psychological science, distinguishes it from the more general and potentially misleading term "psychology," and seeks to help the inquisitive theologian identify the types of questions in which the psychological sciences will be useful. Here, as in other parts of the text, Barrett gives form to the points being made by posing insightful example questions. For instance, "Why does it often seem so hard for people to grasp and hold onto the idea of Grace?" (p. 13).1 *Chapter 2 further defines the psychological sciences by way of a quick trip through the history of experimental psychology, notes the mindset of the scientific psychologist (i.e., curious and skeptical), describes the demographically relevant features of this community of scholars, and briefly catalogs the various types of materials produced by its professionals. Additional care is taken to delineate the organizational structure of empirical papers and to clarify important discipline-specific terms such as evidence, hypotheses, effects, and effect sizes. *The third and largest chapter of the book maps out the many areas and subdisciplines the field has to offer. These include the biological basis for behavior, social psychology, personality psychology, cognitive psychology and cognitive science (it's more interdisciplinary cousin), developmental psychology, and a few others. The relative bulk of this chapter reflects space allotted within each area to draw out particular lines of research relevant for use in interdisciplinary collaboration. As in other sections, Barrett never strays too far from the book's stated aim, to serve the integrative needs of the interested theologian. *Interestingly, it is not until the penultimate chapter that implications related to emerging new paradigms and overarching themes are brought to the foreground. It opens with a description of the recent emergence of positive psychology and the current emphasis placed on cognitive anthropology and cultural evolution. These areas are followed by a section on evolutionary and comparative psychology. The chapter concludes with religion itself as a topic of study as viewed from four different vantage points: psychology, cognitive science, evolutionary studies, and neuroscience. *The last and briefest chapter addresses the thorny issue of methodological naturalism, noting its necessity to avoid supernatural explanations but also lamenting its inability to settle contentions regarding the relationship between human behavior and overarching metaphysical questions. This chapter also speaks to the problem of reductionism, arguing that psychological scientists oftentimes attack their topics of interest reductively. While acknowledging that many then blithely imply ontological reductionism in their interpretations, nonetheless Barrett suggests that "... most good psychologists do not forget the whole" (p. 140). The book concludes with one more call for theologians to incorporate the findings of psychological science into their work. *Evaluatively, the book has much to offer, including a very expeditious yet effective pathway forged through this broad and corrugated discipline. Additionally, the chosen areas of elaboration seem appropriate and properly suggestive of potential cross-disciplinary alignment. Complementing the helpful exemplar questions peppered throughout the summary sections are several text boxes highlighting examples of existing cross-disciplinary activity. For instance, one side-bar discussion features the work of theologian Christopher Woznicki, who argues that concepts in cognitive psychology can be used to better give an account of the theological notion of perichoresis (pp. 81-82). Most importantly, the author's genuine desire to stimulate interdisciplinary collaboration readily seeps through the pages. Barrett has built a strong and winsome case suggesting theologians willing to interact with the psychological sciences will be well served in doing so. *The most substantial drawback has to do with what has been left out, namely, the soft underbelly of the discipline. For instance, there was no mention of the replication crisis now plaguing the psychological sciences.2 Readers should be aware that there are challenging measurement difficulties that sit at the foundation of all scientific pursuits, especially those that aspire to contend with concepts such as anxiety, emotion, personality, and attachment. *Furthermore, although the book offers many helpful definitions, two critical ones were found missing. One is the construct of religion. The default post-enlightenment understanding is far from clear and directive when made the focus of study.3 The other is science itself. In addition to enduring definitional challenges regarding both the term as a method and as a body of knowledge, there are also important sociological aspects of the concept that merit mentioning. That is, science as a community; a community that can succumb to the same "groupish" tendencies found in all social networks. *A more complete historical account would serve to support the "science as community" omission noted above. Perhaps outsiders should be made aware that the history of psychology is more than a clean handoff from Wundt to Watson to the modern psychological scientist. Freud, for instance, was dogmatic in claiming his system of psychoanalysis was anchored in the natural sciences.4 But there were also the Functionalists and the Gestaltists--the "physics-minded" Gestaltists offering a nonreductionistic paradigm, by the way. Readers should know that psychological science has been governed by many paradigms over the past 150 years, each of them being considered properly scientific by their advocates. *There is also no mention of some rather dubious attempts by psychological scientists in the past to directly address (i.e., correct) theological concepts,5 including offerings of updated understanding of Jesus in light of modern psychology.6 In one sense there may be good reason for their omission. These bygone works reside firmly in history's dustbin, and unlike these previous efforts, TheoPsych is not trying to "do" theology, rather it is merely offering its services passively. Nonetheless, an acknowledgment of and distinction between this history and the current project might serve to allay any misgivings a historically informed reader might have, especially when sections of TheoPsych could be interpreted as being somewhat assertive (e.g., Various Sciences of "Religion," pp. 126-35). Greater lengths should be taken to avoid any impression that this is the work of a missionary from the land of facts sent to enlighten the backward residents of faith. *Finally, there is the influence of the current paradigm. The most popular option is evolutionary psychology. This approach is noted in the book; the promise of interesting connections being forged with biology, cultural studies, and anthropology is properly identified as clearly worthy of continued exploration. However, this is the third attempt to tie the science of human behavior to biological evolution, the first two (eugenics and sociobiology) having left a rather embarrassing legacy.7 Evolutionary psychology has several major problems, and they are not particularly helped when partnered with the evolution of culture.8 *In summary, this book would better serve collaborative efforts if the picture presented within were not so nice and tidy. In the long run, brutally transparent portrayals will be needed from all collaborators if there is to be hope for building cross-disciplinary theoretical structures that bring us closer to truth. Despite these criticisms, TheoPsych is unquestionably an impressive and important offering, one that is well positioned to advance the essential work of cultivating interdisciplinary syntheses. Now, if only more folk in the social sciences would care to understand what theology has to offer them. *Notes *1For example, Adam S. Hodge et al., "Experiencing Grace: A Review of the Empirical Literature," The Journal of Positive Psychology 17, no. 3 (2022): 375-88, https:/doi.org/10.1080/17439760.2020.1858943. Also, see K. I. Pargament and J. J. Exline, Working with Spiritual Struggles in Psychotherapy: From Research to Practice (New York: Guilford Press, 2021), https://www.guilford.com/books/Working-with-Spiritual-Struggles-in-Psychotherapy/Pargament-Exline/9781462524310/contents. *2J. P. Ioannidis, "Why most published research findings are false," PLoS Medicine 2, no. 8 (2005): e124, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0020124. Erratum in PLoS Medicine 19, no. 8 (2022): e1004085. *3Peter Harrison, The Territories of Science and Religion (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2015). *4Sigmund Freud, "Some Elementary Lessons in Psychoanalysis," in The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, ed. James Strachey (London: Hogarth Press, 1940). *5Raymond B. Cattell, Beyondism: Religion from Science (New York: Praeger Publishers, 1987). *6Granville Stanley Hall, Jesus, the Christ in the Light of Psychology (New York: Doubleday, 1917). *7Paul A. Lombardo, Three Generations, No Imbeciles: Eugenics, the Supreme Court, and Buck v. Bell (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2022). *8Edwin E. Gantt and Richard N. Williams, "The Triumph of the Will: Evolutionary Psychology and the Conceptual Incoherence of Enhancement," Journal of Humanistic Psychology 62, no. 5 (2020), https://doi.org/10.1177/0022167819899009. *Reviewed by Paul Nesselroade, Professor of Psychology and Honors Program Director, Asbury University, Wilmore, KY 40390.
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