Holistic Psychology: Toward a Unified Science of the Whole Person. Doctrinal Foundations, Theoretical Framework, and the Praxis of PNIA

Authors

  • ANOOP POOMADAM

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.69980/ajpr.v28i1.687

Abstract

Psychology today stands at a threshold. After a century of remarkable discoveries, it remains marked by fragmentation: cognition is studied apart from emotion, behavior apart from intention, and clinical methods apart from the cultural and ecological worlds in which persons live. What is often missing is a science that treats the human being as an indivisible whole. This paper introduces Holistic Psychology as such a discipline. It is founded on the axiom that the person cannot be divided without distortion, and it advances a sevenfold anthropology that views cognitive, affective, conative, somatic, relational, ecological, and transcendent dimensions as inseparable aspects of human life.

The doctrine is not offered in abstraction. Over the past two decades, it has been tested and refined through the Psycho-Nutritional Intervention Approach (PNIA), a structured program of practice conducted in clinical and community settings at the SATWA Foundation for Mental Hygienics & Holistic Wellness  and Anandaveda Wellness homes in Kerala, India. PNIA works through six interconnected pillars: conscious nutrition, yoga and breath regulation, meditation and mind training, music and play therapies, counseling and group processes, and community-based wellness immersion. Each of these pillars is anchored in contemporary research—ranging from nutritional psychiatry and psycho neuro immunology to meditation neuroscience and ecological psychology—while remaining coherent with classical wisdom traditions.

Holistic Psychology further secures itself through clear safeguards and ethical obligations: it admits no practice without principle, no claim without evidence, no tradition without discernment, and no practitioner without formation. Its mandate reaches beyond symptom management to the cultivation of resilience, dignity, and meaning in relation to self, community, and nature. As both a scientific paradigm and a doctrinal charter, Holistic Psychology is advanced here as a foundational contribution to the future of psychology—one that seeks to restore unity in an age increasingly defined by division.

Author Biography

ANOOP POOMADAM

Director, SATWA Foundation for Mental Health and Holistic Wellness

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Published

2025-03-16