Constructing a neuroscientific pastoral theology of fear and hope
by Whitehead, Jason C., Ph.D., UNIVERSITY OF DENVER, 2010, 321 pages; 3411932

Abstract:

Contemporary therapeutic circles utilize the concept of anxiety to describe a variety of disorders. Emotional reductionism is a detriment to the therapeutic community and the persons seeking its help. This dissertation proposes that attention to the emotion of fear clarifies our categorization of particular disorders and challenges emotional reductionism. I propose that the emotion of fear, through its theological relationship to hope, is useful in therapeutic practice for persons who experience trauma and PTSD.

I explore the differences between fear and anxiety by deconstructing anxiety. Through this process, I develop four categories which help the emotion of fear stand independent of anxiety in therapy. Temporality, behaviors, antidote and objects are categories which distinguish fear from anxiety. Together, they provide the impetus to explore the emotion of fear.

Understanding the emotion of fear requires an examination of its neurophysiological embodiment. This includes the brain structures responsible for fear production, its defensive behaviors and the evolutionary retention of fear. Dual inheritance evolutionary theory posits that we evolved physically and culturally, helping us understand the inescapability of fear and the unique threats humans fear. The threats humans react to develop through subjective interpretations of experience. Sometimes threats, through their presence in our memories and imaginations, inhibit a person’s ability to live out a preferred identity and experience hope.

 
AdviserCarrie Doehring
SchoolUNIVERSITY OF DENVER
SourceDAI/A 71-07, p. , Jul 2010
Source TypeDissertation
SubjectsPastoral counseling; Theology; Counseling psychology
Publication Number3411932
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