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Religious Problem Solving and the Complexity of Religious Rationality Within an Iranian Muslim Ideological Surround
Authors:Nima Ghorbani  P. J. Watson  Zoha Saeedi  Zhuo Chen  Christopher F. Silver
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, University of Tehran;2. Department of Psychology, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Abstract:Comparative rationality analysis formally examines the incommensurable social rationalities that theoretically exist within religions and the social sciences according to the ideological surround model (ISM) of the psychology of religion. This study extended these procedures to a new cultural context: 220 Iranian university students responded to the Religious Problem‐Solving Scales developed by Pargament et al. (1988). As hypothesized, the Collaborative Problem‐Solving Style was consistent, and the Self‐Directing Style inconsistent, with Iranian Muslim religious and psychological adjustment. The Deferring Style had ambiguous implications. Comparative rationality analysis demonstrated that sample interpretations of these styles explained greater variance in adjustment than did the original scales. These procedures also yielded the unexpected discovery that the Deferring Style included a secular as well as a religious form of Iranian rationality. These data most importantly support the ISM claim that “future objectivity” requires empirical analyses of the incommensurable rationalities operating within the psychology of religion.
Keywords:Religious problem‐solving styles  ideological surround model  Iran  incommensurable rationalities  religious and psychological adjustment
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