Where once the soul was seen as the seat of meaning, purpose, and transcendence, it is now frequently sidelined, if not outright dismissed, as unscientific or obsolete. Yet the human being continues to yearn—for connection, for wholeness, for something beyond the material. These longings do not vanish under analysis; they only become more urgent in their neglect.
A psychology that forgets the soul becomes a science of symptoms, not of healing. True healing—cura animarum, the care of souls—requires a reawakening of the sacred dimension of the human experience. Perhaps what we need now is not just a psychology, but a psychosophy—a wisdom of the soul that restores its rightful place at the center of human inquiry.
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