Who needs the concept of spirituality? Human beings seem to!
نویسنده
چکیده
Well, it ’s finally happened. I’ve been attacked in the scientific literature ~Salander, 2006!. Well, just to clarify, it wasn’t a personal attack, but rather an attack of the highest and most noble order: an attack on the scientific rigor of the conceptual underpinnings of my recent work on meaning and spirituality in advanced cancer patients ~e.g., Breitbart, 2002!. To be honest, and a bit less grandiose, it was not an attack against me alone, but rather a set of critical comments aimed at a growing number of investigators who have been publishing papers ~a 600% increase over the past 10 years! dealing with religious or spiritual aspects of life-threatening illness ~Stefanek et al., 2005!. The critical comments by Dr. Par Salander of the Department of Social Welfare, Umea University, Sweden, in a recent issue of the journal Psycho-oncology ~Salander, 2006! challenge the need for and the validity of the concept of spirituality. Professor Salander is a thoughtful researcher who has published broadly in the area of psychooncology, including a recent article in our own Palliative & Supportive Care ~a journal devoted to the psychiatric, psychosocial, existential, and “spiritual” domains of palliative and supportive care!. He is also clearly versed in aspects of existential philosophy and psychotherapy ~e.g., Frankl, 1959; Yalom, 1980!. The main challenges of his question, “Who needs the concept of spirituality?” fall into several categories: ~1! Spirituality as a “concept” is poorly defined or operationalized; ~2! the concept of spirituality is not linked to any theory and lacks a systemic meaning; ~3! the term spiritual is unnecessarily and inaccurately being used to describe what are essentially existential issues, and; ~4! finally, the universality of the term spiritual is challenged, pointing out that it may be acceptable and reasonable to ask an American if he or she is a “spiritual person,” but that such a question would be quite irrelevant and alien to a Swede or a “nonEnglish speaking secular European.” Professor Salander correctly points out examples of papers where the term spiritual is used inconsistently: some papers in which it is alternately used to describe religious beliefs or religiosity, papers in which the term is used to describe existential concepts of meaning and purpose, and finally papers in which the concept is used to refer to general psychosocial issues ~Breitbart, 2002; Meraviglia, 2004; Murray et al., 2004; Krupski et al., 2006!. Dr. Salander asks us to use the terms religion or religious, rather than spiritual, when we mean religious and to use the terms meaning, purpose, or existential, rather than spiritual, when we mean meaning and so on. Clearly, there is a need for clarity in our definitions of concepts such as spirituality as well as a need for accuracy and specificity in this realm of research. But Professor Salander has gone one step beyond challenging researchers in the area of “spirituality or spiritual well-being” to be more accurate and specific in the description of these concepts and what they are in fact measuring in their studies. He is directly challenging the need for the concept of spirituality independent of the terms religious and existential and proposes that spirituality as a concept is irrelevant for the majority of the “secular” world ~in particular secularized Europeans!. In his critique of spirituality as a concept, Dr. Salander links the spiritual to the religious, and further links existential to the term secular. He even postulates that “the advocates of a religious0spiritual discourse substitute ‘spiritual’ for ‘existential’ because they dislike the latter ’s connection to existential philosophy and its denial of a God” ~Salander, 2006, p. 648!. I would take exception with the above conceptualizations, particularly the notions that the term spiritual is only linked to religious and not secular worldviews and that existential is always linked to secular perspectives rather than religious perspectives. Clearly there are multiple examples of “existential philosophers” who were quite religious in rather traditional senses ~e.g., Kierkegaard and C.S. Lewis!, existentialists who were theologians but stretched Palliative and Supportive Care ~2007!, 5, 105–106. Printed in the USA. Copyright © 2007 Cambridge University Press 1478-9515007 $20.00 DOI: 10.10170S1478951507070162
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Palliative & supportive care
دوره 5 2 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2007