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A Secularist’s Perspective on Spirituality

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Conclusions

The fundamental conclusion to be reached at the summit regarding spirituality and coaching seems to relate to the matter of context. It is not so much a matter of bringing a “spiritual perspective” to one’s coaching. It is more a matter of choosing specific topics and framing specific questions that invite exploration of issues related to “spirituality” – issues such as personal integrity, interpersonal caring, focusing on personal and organizational purpose. The coaching dialogue should lean into the future and promote “learning into the future”.

I suspect that my own secular perspective on spirituality is similarly topic specific. As Matt Friedman would suggest, I am “spiritual” in my caring concern about the welfare of family members and friends. I assume a spiritual frame of reference when I think about my own legacy (as a 82 year old man) and as I consider the important (“bucket-list”) things I have yet to accomplish in my life. I must sort out priorities and fully nurture the relationships that are truly important to me. As Erik Erikson would remind me, this is the time in my life to bring together all the disparate elements that are important (Friedman’s spiritual assemblage) –and to care deeply about and take deep care of these elements.

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References

Dewey, John (1997/1938) Experience and Education, New York: Free Press.

Chapman, J. Harley (1988) Jung’s Three Theories of Religious Experience. Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellon Press.

James, William (1982/1900) The Varieties of Religious Experience: A Study in Human Nature, New York: Penguin.

Jung, Carl (1938) Psychology and Religion. New Haven, CN: Yale University Press.

Klein, George (1967) Peremptory Ideation: Structure and Force in Motivated Ideas, Psychological Issues, vol. V, No. 2-3. New York: International Universities Press, pp. 78-128.

Neumann, Erich (1954) The Origins and History of Consciousness. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Nock, Arthur (1933) Conversion. London: Oxford University Press.

Otto, Rudolph (1923) The Idea of the Holy. [Translated by John W. Harvey] London: Oxford Press

Palmer, Parker (1990) The Active Life, San Francisco: Harper and Row.

Redfield, James (1993) The Celestine Prophecy, New York: Warner Books.

Tillich, Paul (1952). The Courage to Be, New Haven, CN: Yale University Press.

 

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