In keeping with a general increase in interest in spirituality and complementary and alternative treatments, prayer has garnered attention among some behavioral scientists. Masters and Spielmans have conducted a meta-analysis of the effects of distant intercessory prayer, but detected no discernible effects.
Spirituality has played a central role in self-help movements such as Alcoholics Anonymous:
"...if an alcoholic failed to perfect and enlarge his spiritual life
through work and self-sacrifice for others, he could not survive the
certain trials and low spots ahead...."
If spirituality is understood as the search for or the development of inner peace or the foundations of happiness, then spiritual practice
of some kind is essential for personal well being. This activity may or
may not include belief in supernatural beings. If one has such a belief
and feels that relationship to such beings is the foundation of
happiness then spiritual practice will be pursued on that basis: if one
has no such belief spiritual practice is still essential for the
management and understanding of thoughts and emotions which otherwise
prevent happiness. Many techniques and practices developed and explored
in religious contexts, such as meditation, are immensely valuable in themselves as skills for managing aspects of the inner life.
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