The Spiritual Mindset : An Integrative Theoretical Framework for Meaning-Making and Motivational Orientation
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This paper develops a theoretical framework for understanding spirituality as a psychological orientation embedded in social and cultural systems of meaning. Psychology has long struggled to define and operationalize spirituality in a manner that preserves conceptual clarity while accommodating its experiential and motivational diversity. Existing approaches often fragment spirituality across trait-based measures, coping frameworks, or institutional religious constructs, limiting integration across clinical, cognitive, and personality research. This article presents an integrative theoretical framework for the spiritual mindset, conceptualized as a dynamic psychological orientation characterized by meaning-making, self–transcendence, epistemic openness, and significance regulation. Drawing on research from psychology of religion and spirituality, motivational psychology, cognitive science, and clinical theory, the framework synthesizes prior findings into a coherent model that accounts for both adaptive and maladaptive expressions of spirituality. The model clarifies boundary conditions between spirituality and religiosity, delineates mechanisms through which spiritual orientations influence cognition and behavior, and identifies pathways through which spiritual meaning-making may contribute to psychological growth or vulnerability. The framework is intended as a standalone theoretical contribution that consolidates existing literatures while offering testable claims to guide future empirical research.