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Author Spotlight: Exploring Dynamic Neural Changes Associated with Religious Chanting
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Is Religion Special?

Jordan W Moon1, Adam B Cohen1, Kristin Laurin2

  • 1Department of Psychology, Arizona State University.

Perspectives on Psychological Science : a Journal of the Association for Psychological Science
|August 22, 2022
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

While religion is psychologically important, research shows it may not be psychologically special. Future studies need rigorous designs to prove religion

Keywords:
death anxietyhealthmeaningmoralityprosocialityreligionself-controlwell-being

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Area of Science:

  • Psychology of Religion
  • Cognitive Science
  • Social Psychology

Background:

  • Religion involves unique claims, such as supernatural agents.
  • Religion intersects with key psychological domains: morality, well-being, self-control, meaning, and death anxiety.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To critically evaluate whether religion is psychologically special.
  • To determine if religion employs unique psychological mechanisms compared to secular ones.

Main Methods:

  • Critical review of existing research on religion and psychological domains.
  • Analysis of proposed unique religious mechanisms (supernatural agents, ultimate meaning, literal immortality).

Main Results:

  • Religion is psychologically important across various domains.
  • Limited strong evidence suggests religion is psychologically special, except possibly for health effects.
  • Existing secular mechanisms may explain religion's psychological impact.

Conclusions:

  • More research with precise definitions and robust experimental designs is needed.
  • Future studies must focus on causal inference to demonstrate religion's psychological specialness.
  • The potential special effects of religion on health warrant further investigation.