E-mail address to contact Admin direct is admin@religionethics followed by .co.uk.
oddly enough I can agree in part with some of the sentement of your post .Yesterday I had occasion to visit a "Complementary medicine " clinic (the only place I could find in an emergency) to fix a painful toe nail The whole place was alien to me but she sure fixed my toe 👍
I'm sorry , I'd like to continue with this but it's proving too difficult on this old iPhone 4 with signal dropping in and out 😤
It's a good time to go to the pub anyway.
Sorry, perhaps I should have been a little clearer, I didn't say that I personally feel that psychology isn't a science. I do think that it's at the far reaches of what the scientific method can work with, and that any findings - even given the inherent provisional nature of scientific findings - needs to be seen as provisional.The problem with psychology is that it's at the edge of what the scientific method can work with, currently, given the lack of depth of understanding we currently have of the component parts of what it's looking at. We couldn't conduct advanced research on applications of lasers without Maxwell's basics of electromagnetism, and similarly we are hampered in our scientific understanding of the mind by our current lack of in depth knowledge of the mechanics of neurology. The answer isn't to dispense with scientific enquiry or to water down scientific rigour, it's to be patient and realise that we're constantly learning about neurology, and those understandings will flow through.We need to maintain the standards that have brought us this far, not abandon them because we'd feel more comfortable with an unjustifiable confidence than with a justified 'We're not quite sure just yet'.O.
.......which is what spirituality overlaps with?!
Yes...exactly. Psychology is at the edge of the scientific method....so, how do you expect science (with its present limitations) to be useful in understanding deeper aspects of psychology....which is what spirituality overlaps with?!