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  1. The Variety of Deconversion Experiences: Contours of a Concept in Respect to Empirical Research.Barbara Keller & Heinz Streib - 2004 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 26 (1):181-200.
    This article presents an outline of historical and situational arguments which suggest a focus on deconversion, an outline of conversion research and its consequences for deconversion, and a discussion of extant empirical research on deconversion. The discussion then focuses on the conceptualization of deconversion and compiles the features from which a comprehensive concept of deconversion may emerge. The core features of the deconversion concept which is suggested in this article are complemented by dimensions of diversity which also include a developmental (...)
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  • The Narrative Construction of Muslim Identity: A Single Case Study.Tomas Lindgren - 2004 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 26 (1):51-74.
    This article presents an analysis of how a male convert to Islam incorporates events from his life history into a narrative structure in order to construct and maintain a Muslim identity. The study focuses on how the individual and in particular a person's life history becomes social and universal, and how the social and universal becomes particularized and individualized, in the narration of life. The results of the analysis showed that the valued endpoint determines the selection and ordering of different (...)
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  • Near-death experiences and spirituality.Bruce Greyson - 2006 - Zygon 41 (2):393-414.
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  • (1 other version)Measuring the Unmeasurable by Ticking Boxes and Opening Pandora's Box? Mixed Methods Research as a Useful Tool for Investigating Exceptional and Spiritual Experiences.Niko Kohls, Anna Hack & Harald Walach - 2008 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 30 (1):155-187.
    A monomethod bias still prevails in the psychology of religion, with the developing field studying the relationship between religiosity, spirituality and health being almost completely dominated by questionnaire research. This comes as a surprise, because the experiential side of religion, spirituality, can by definition be regarded as inner and private experiences of transcendence that have frequently been described as being of utmost importance. At first glance, from this perspective, standardized questionnaire scales appear to be inappropriate for “measuring the unmeasurable”. Until (...)
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  • (1 other version)Scientific explanations of mystical experiences: Evan Fales.Evan Fales - 1996 - Religious Studies 32 (3):297-313.
    In Part I of this paper, I took up a challenge posed by Alston , Wainwright , Yandell , and other theists who hold the rather natural view that mystical experiences provide perceptual contact with God, roughly on a par with the access sense experience affords to the natural world. These theists recognize, at the same time, that the plausibility of this view would be significantly compromised by the possibility of scientifically explaining mystical experiences – especially if a scientific explanation (...)
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  • The End that Turned into a New Beginning: The Journal for the Psychology of Religion, 1907-1913. On the (Pre)history of the International Association for the Psychology of Religion. [REVIEW]Jacob A. Belzen - 2013 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 35 (3):285-319.
    In 2014, the International Association for the Psychology of Religion will have its centennial, and so will its scientific journal, the present Archive for the Psychology of Religion [ Archiv für Religionspsychologie, ARp]. This first article on IAPR's history analyses the fate of the forerunner of ARp, which was published from 1907-1913. When psychology in general began to develop as an empirical, research-based “scientific discipline” since the midst of the 19th century, the psychology of religion became a prominent application of (...)
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  • Psychology of Religion in America.Paul E. Johnson - 1962 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 7 (1):42-53.
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  • (1 other version)Scientific Explanations of Mystical Experiences: II. The Challenge to Theism.Evan Fales - 1996 - Religious Studies 32 (3):297-313.
    In Part I of this paper, I argued that the mystical experiences of Teresa of Avila are well explained by the anthropological theory of I. M. Lewis. In Part II, I discuss how the causal gap between the social circumstances identified by Lewis and individual phenomenology can be filled in. I then show that Lewis's theory, thus supplemented, is a genuine competitor to the theistic understanding of mystical experience, and that it is much more strongly confirmed by the available evidence (...)
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  • Pendeln zwischen Magie und Religion.J. A. van Belzen - 2000 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 23 (1):102-122.
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  • Addiction and Spiritual Transformation. An Empirical Study on Narratives of Recovering Addicts' Conversion Testimonies in Dutch and Serbian Contexts.Srdjan Sremac & R. Ruard Ganzevoort - 2013 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 35 (3):399-435.
    The article examines how recovering drug addicts employ testimonies of conversion and addiction to develop and sustain personal identity and create meaning from varied experiences in life. Drawing on 31 autobiographies of recovering drug addicts we analyze conversion and addiction testimonies in two European contexts. The analysis shows how existing frames of reference and self-understanding are undermined and/or developed. We first describe the substance abuse in participants’ addiction trajectory. Next, we outline the religious aspects and the primary conception of recovering (...)
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