Psychology

Integral psychology is an emerging psychological movement that combines the existing trends in modern Western psychology and integrates them with spiritual teachings to create a fully integrated, global psychology. The system originated with Ken Wilber.

The integral approach is a synthesis of East and West, science and spirituality, body and mind, individual and society. It covers evolution, society, culture and ecology, alongside the spiritual and mental knowledge of man. It integrates millennia of ancient philosophical knowledge with modern science.
Integration is an attempt to synthesise the knowledge systems dealing with human knowledge in a law-like way.

This integration is called global integration, and activities that integrate a single domain are called partial integration. Partial integration is for example neuro-psycho-immunology, or combining a psychotherapeutic method with a meditation method, or combining Chinese medicine, Western medicine and stress-relieving spiritual practices into a treatment plan. A globally integrated system is an all-encompassing map, which would be impractical given the abundance.
The specificity of an integrated system is that it recognises all fields and turns competition into cooperation.