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Religious Beliefs, Evolutionary Psychiatry, and Mental Health in America - Evolutionary Threat Assessment Systems Theory (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2017)
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Religious Beliefs, Evolutionary Psychiatry, and Mental Health in America - Evolutionary Threat Assessment Systems Theory (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2017)
Series: Religion, Spirituality and Health: A Social Scientific Approach, 1
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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This book provides a new perspective on the association between
religious beliefs and mental health. The book is divided into five
parts, the first of which traces the development of theories of
organic evolution in the cultural and religious context before
Charles Darwin. Part II describes the major evolutionary theories
that Darwin proposed in his three books on evolution, and the
religious, sociological, and scientific reactions to his theories.
Part III introduces the reader to the concept of evolutionary
psychiatry. It discusses how different regions of the brain evolved
over time, and explains that certain brain regions evolved to
protect us from danger by assessing threats of harm in the
environment, including other humans. Specifically, this part
describes: how psychiatric symptoms that are commonly experienced
by normal individuals during their everyday lives are the product
of brain mechanisms that evolved to protect us from harm; the
prevalence rate of psychiatric symptoms in the U.S. general
population; how religious and other beliefs influence the brain
mechanisms that underlie psychiatric symptoms; and the brain
regions that are involved in different psychiatric disorders. Part
IV presents the findings of U.S. studies demonstrating that
positive beliefs about God and life-after-death, and belief in
meaning-in-life and divine forgiveness have salutary associations
with mental health, whereas negative beliefs about God and
life-after-death, belief in the Devil and human evil, and doubts
about one's religious beliefs have pernicious associations with
mental health. The last part of the book summarizes each section
and recommends research on the brain mechanism underlying
psychiatric symptoms, and the relationships among these brain
mechanisms, religious beliefs, and mental health in the context of
ETAS Theory.
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