GenMarshall
High Elven ISB Capt & Ghost Agent
In reading, Religion and Mental Health: Evidence for an association by Harold G. Koenig and David Larson. They state that the healing professions of psychiatry and religion have had a historical relationship between them. Even the first mental hospitals were established and ran by religious orders during the Middle Ages. Though advances of mental illnesses were suppressed during that time. Fast forward to the Renaissance, the mentally ill, whom were thought to be possessed by deamons, were persecuted by misguided religious leaders.CurtSibling said:Again, a quite well-thought out paragraph.
But the vast majority of humans are likely put aside their beliefs when
face with crisis or deadly situations, and moderate religious people are
just as likely to commit suicide as anyone else...
A point of note:
Indeed, extreme religious people have all the trappings of insane humans.
So, can we project that moderate religious people have a mild version of
this mental state, which can be provoked into full blown frenzy?
Fortunately religious reformers helped put a stop the persecution and psychiatric care developed in Europe and the US in the mid 1800s and came to be known as "moral treatments" which has religious influences. Thus the cooperation between religious and psychologists ended with Sigmoud Freud and other psychologists with the concering of neurotic influences of religion. Early research have confirmed the clinical lore that religion impaired mental health. In recent years, with better methodolgies in the past two decades reveal quite the opposite, that religious involvement is associated with a greater well-being, less depression and anxiety, greater soial suppoer, and less substance abuse.
The body of research is not well known to many psychologists who were introduced to the harmfulness of religion during their psychiatric training and remain skeptical about the mental health benifits of religious practices. This skepticism has been fueled by concerns about the ill effects of religion on mental health. Many religions that survived overtime and developed a stable tradition that advocates a hopeful and optomistic world-view, encurage human traits like altruism, forgiveness, and kidness to promote the establisment and maintenance of social relation, in all which does contribute to better mental health.
Referances:
Koenig, Harold G.; Larson, David B.; International Review of Psychiatry, Vol 13(2), May 2001. Special issue: Religion and psychiatry. pp. 67-78.