This book is based on presentations that were delivered in March 2017 during the midwinter meeting of the Society for Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology (Division 24 of the American Psychological Association) in Richmond, Virginia. The presidential forum that I conducted at this meeting was entitled, Re-envisioning theoretical psychology: Rebels with (out) a cause?, emphasizing not only the need for futureoriented reflexivity, but also the possibility for engaging in contexts of restricted agency. Thus, rather than providing a systematic, coherent overview of theoretical psychology, this book expresses individual visions and ideas for theoretical psychology for the present and future, rooted in the research traditions and biographies of its authors, who have been leaders in the field. I believe that such a re-envisioning is necessary based on the notion that theoretical and philosophical psychologies have “biographies” (as do persons, objects, events, concepts, etc.) and have reached middle-age. The division was founded more than fifty years ago, and since the institutionalization of theoretical psychology as a separate subdiscipline within psychology, decades of reflection have passed, and psychology has “matured.” It seems timely to rethink and re-envision the activities, responsibilities, and hopes of theoretical psychology.