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The Fuller Symposium
on the Integration of Psychology and
Theology |
The Integration Symposium
The Fuller Symposium on the Integration of Psychology and Theology,
better known as the Integration Symposium, is an annual
lectureship hosted by the School of Psychology featuring a nationally
recognized scholar who focuses on a single integrative issue. Topics
have ranged from aging and dementia to what Evangelicals can learn from
Jung. The symposium is an academic gathering place in which integration
can be tackled on an intellectual level. Students are given the
opportunity to learn from scholars in many fields concerning the various
intersections of theology and psychology.
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Symposia by Date
Symposium, February 2008
2008: Religion and Therapy:
Future Directions
Mark
McMinn, Keith Meador, Marsha Linehan, William Miller and LeRon Shults
Integration Symposia 2000-2007
Click
here for a full history of the
Fuller Integration Symposia
2007: Reviving Christian Psychology
Ellen Charry
2006: Community Narratives and Personal Stories
40th Anniversary, Fuller School of Psychology
Julian Rappaport
2005: Science, Faith and Human
Nature:
Reconciling
Neuropsychology and Christian Theology
Warren
Brown 2004: The Living God
and Our Living Psyche:
C. G. Jung's Psychology and
Christian Faith
Ann
Ulanov
2003: A Radical Proposal
for Integration:
Psychology in
Dialogue with the Anabaptist Tradition
Nancey
Murphy
2002: Spirituality in the Treatment of African American Families
Nancy Boyd-Franklin and Archie Smith
2001: Agape, Dementia, and the Family
Stephen Post
2000: The Virus of Forgiveness
Everett
Worthington |
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