Where Are We, and Where Should We Go? An Introduction to Davis et al., "Sixty Years of Studying the Sacred: Auditing and Advancing the Psychology of Religion and Spirituality"

被引:0
作者
Boyatzis, Chris J. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Bucknell Univ, Dept Psychol, Lewisburg, PA USA
[2] Bucknell Univ, Dept Psychol, Lewisburg, PA 17837 USA
关键词
religion; spirituality; bibliometric; Western; educated; industrialized; rich; democratic; qualitative;
D O I
10.1037/rel0000518
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
This article is an introduction to a distinctive and unusually important article, appearing in this issue, by Ward Davis and his colleagues who conducted a remarkably detailed bibliometric analysis of all articles published in three eminent journals in our field: the Archive for the Psychology of Religion, the field's oldest journal; The International Journal for the Psychology of Religion; and this journal, the Psychology of Religion and Spirituality. Their review spanned from 1962 to 2022, resulting in a massive corpus of 1,802 articles. Within these, they focused on empirical research articles, coded for features such as sampling, design, methodology, topic, use of Open Science practices, and so forth. They also analyzed trends over time in these features. In effect, this bibliometric analysis tells us who we are and how we know what we know: Who we study, what topics we study, what designs and measures we use, our use of Open Science practices, trends over time in our research, and even how frequently research in this field is cited. Davis and his team also offer recommendations for higher quality and rigor in our research. I elaborate on several of the improvements raised by Davis et al. to move us toward a more valid and representative psychology of religion and spirituality: The Western, educated, industrialized, rich, democratic problem that permeates our field, changing trends in our samples, and the need for more qualitative and mixed-methods research.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 6
页数:6
相关论文
共 33 条
  • [1] The Next Chapter at PSPR
    Adler, Jonathan M.
    [J]. PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW, 2022, 26 (02) : 87 - 92
  • [2] American Psychological Association, 2023, Journal article reportingstandards (JARS) on race, ethnicity, and culture
  • [3] American Psychological Association, 2023, Executive summary: Journalarticle reporting standards (JARS) on race, ethnicity, and culture
  • [4] The Neglected 95%, a Challenge to Psychology's Philosophy of Science
    Arnett, Jeffrey Jensen
    [J]. AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGIST, 2009, 64 (06) : 571 - 574
  • [5] PsychologyWithin and Without the State
    Barrett, H. Clark
    [J]. ANNUAL REVIEW OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 73 : 461 - 487
  • [6] Mystical Experience Among Tibetan Buddhists: The Common Core Thesis Revisited
    Chen, Zhuo
    Hood, Ralph W., Jr.
    Yang, Lijun
    Watson, P. J.
    [J]. JOURNAL FOR THE SCIENTIFIC STUDY OF RELIGION, 2011, 50 (02) : 328 - 338
  • [7] Measuring Muslim Religiosity and Spirituality: Measurement Invariance of Muslim Attitudes Toward Religion and Muslim Experiential Religiousness Scales Across China, Iran, Malaysia, and Pakistan
    Chen, Zhuo Job
    Ma, Zhiqiong
    Ghorbani, Nima
    Khan, Ziasma
    Tekke, Mustafa
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGY OF RELIGION AND SPIRITUALITY, 2022, 14 (04) : 503 - 511
  • [8] How USA-Centric Is Psychology? An Archival Study of Implicit Assumptions of Generalizability of Findings to Human Nature Based on Origins of Study Samples
    Cheon, Bobby K.
    Melani, Irene
    Hong, Ying-yi
    [J]. SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL AND PERSONALITY SCIENCE, 2020, 11 (07) : 928 - 937
  • [9] Correa Bernier C. J., 2016, Toward a Latin American psychology ofreligion
  • [10] Cowden R. G., 2023, Positive psychology andreligion/spirituality across cultures in Africa, Asia, and Oceania