GaryLouisSmith wrote: ↑August 11th, 2019, 5:53 amI am no fan of the theory of evolution as it is usually described today. It is basically Hegelianism.
???
GaryLouisSmith wrote: ↑August 11th, 2019, 5:53 amI know nothing about transpersonal psychology. It sounds horrid.
"Transpersonal psychology is a transformative psychology of the whole person in intimate relationship with an interconnected and evolving world; it pays special attention to self-expansive states as well as to spiritual, mystical, and other exceptional human experiences that gain meaning in such a context."
(Hartelius, Glenn, Geffen Rothe, and Paul J. Roy. "A Brand from the Burning: Defining Transpersonal Psychology." In
The Wiley-Blackwell Handbook of Transpersonal Psychology, edited by Harris L. Friedman and Glenn Hartelius, 3-22. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 2013. p. 14)
"Altered, expanded and transpersonal consciousness. The counter-culture of the 1960s, with its interest in Eastern meditative traditions, New Age cosmology, and psychoactive drugs, displayed a 'romanticist' interest in bizarre extremes of conscious/unconscious altered states. The Journal of Altered States of Consciousness was launched in 1975, with a grand mix of '1960s' topics and neuroscience. The meditative tradition might be seen as an 'applied' component of modern consciousness science, in much the same way that surgery and counselling are applied components of their respective sciences. Benson has conducted electrophysiological studies of Tibetan meditators since the 1970s, and more recently Dunn and Lutz have used functional brain imaging to study subjects during various meditative states inolving 'focused attention', 'emptiness', and 'reflexive consciousness'.
Deriving from Brentano's act psychology, humanistic psychology emerged in the 1950s as a 'third way' reaction against deterministic psychoanalysis and the 'rat psychology' of behaviourism. Transpersonal psychiatry derived from Jung, with his concepts of the collective consciousness, and was furthered by Maslow. These paradigms were highly attuned to the 1960s counter-culture, with awareness-training groups, Esalen Institute, and EST [Erhard Seminars Training]. The Journal of Transpersonal Psychology made its debut in 1969, and the formation of the Association for Transpersonal Psychology followed three years later. The Institute of Noetic Science (founded in 1973 and with its own journal) has been a co-sponsor of Tuscon conferences."
("Consciousness, Modern Scientific Study of." In
The Oxford Companion to Consciousness, edited by Tim Bayne, Axel Cleeremans, and Patrick Wilken. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009. p. 186)