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The Review of Religious Research is published four times a year (September, December, March and June). The journal seeks to provide a regular channel for the exchange of information on methods, findings and uses of religious research. It contains a variety of articles, book reviews and reports on research projects.
Religion --- Religion and sociology --- Research --- Laboratory Research --- Research Activities --- Research and Development --- Research Priorities --- Activities, Research --- Activity, Research --- Development and Research --- Priorities, Research --- Priority, Research --- Research Activity --- Research Priority --- Research, Laboratory --- Prayer --- Religious Beliefs --- Religious Ethics --- Beliefs, Religious --- Ethic, Religious --- Prayers --- Religions --- Religious Belief --- Ethics, Research --- Spiritual Therapies --- Secularism --- Religion. --- Research.
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Like any other subject, the study of religion is a child of its time. Shaped and forged over the course of the twentieth century, it has reflected the interests and political situation of the world at the time. As the twenty-first century unfolds, it is undergoing a major transition along with religion itself. This volume showcases new work and new approaches to religion which work across boundaries of religious tradition, academic discipline and region. The influence of globalizing processes has been evident in social and cultural networking by way of new media like the internet, in the extensive power of global capitalism and in the increasing influence of international bodies and legal instruments. Religion has been changing and adapting too. This handbook offers fresh insights on the dynamic reality of religion in global societies today by underscoring transformations in eight key areas: Market and Branding; Contemporary Ethics and Virtues; Intimate Identities; Transnational Movements; Diasporic Communities; Responses to Diversity; National Tensions; and Reflections on 'Religion'. These themes demonstrate the handbook's new topics and approaches that move beyond existing agendas. Bringing together scholars of all ages and stages of career from around the world, the handbook showcases the dynamism of religion in global societies. It is an accessible introduction to new ways of approaching the study of religion practically, theoretically and geographically. --
Globalization --- Religion and culture. --- Religion. --- Religious aspects. --- Sociology of religion --- Religion --- Religion and culture --- Culture and religion --- Culture --- Religion, Primitive --- Atheism --- Irreligion --- Religions --- Theology --- Prayer --- Religious Beliefs --- Religious Ethics --- Beliefs, Religious --- Ethic, Religious --- Prayers --- Religious Belief --- Spiritual Therapies --- Secularism --- Religious aspects
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"With the advent of the modern cognitive neurosciences, along with anthropological and historical research, the scientific study of religious and spiritual phenomena has become far more sophisticated and wide-ranging. It suggests answers as to how and why religion became so prominent in human societies and in human consciousness. Neurotheology--a term coined by Aldous Huxley in 1962 in his novel Island and introduced into the scientific literature in the 1990s by Newberg and others--explores some of the most controversial positions including the argument that religion was a necessary condition of cohesive societies, morality, and a sense of purpose. The book considers brain development from an evolutionary perspective and assesses how religious and spiritual beliefs and experiences arose and whether such evolutionary evidence eliminates the need for a religious explanation. Newberg demonstrates that religious beliefs and emotions can be both beneficial and detrimental in people's lives. For some, religion provides a means toward compassion, openness, and understanding; others turn to highly destructive acts, as is the case with suicide bombers. What is happening in the brains of such people? Are they pathological? And what of practices such as meditation, prayer, and the ingestion of psychoactive substances? Neuroimaging studies can show how these practices affect people in the moment and over a lifetime. Finally, the book investigates the deeper implications of a neurotheological approach. Does the neuroscientific study of religion negate any or all of the truth claims of religion? How does neurotheology address the "big questions" such as: What is the meaning of life? Why are we here? And what is the true nature of reality?"--
Neurophysiology --- Brain --- Spirituality --- Psychology, Religious --- Religion --- Prayer --- Religious Beliefs --- Religious Ethics --- Beliefs, Religious --- Ethic, Religious --- Prayers --- Religions --- Religious Belief --- Psychology of religion --- Religious psychology --- Spiritual-mindedness --- Cerebrum --- Mind --- Nervous system --- Religious aspects --- Psychological aspects --- Psychology --- Physiology --- Spiritual Therapies --- Secularism --- Psychology and religion --- Philosophy --- Spiritual life --- Central nervous system --- Head --- Neurobiology --- 215 --- 215 Godsdienst en wetenschap --- 215 Religion et science --- Godsdienst en wetenschap --- Religion et science --- Neurophysiologie. --- Neurosciences. --- Psychology, Religious. --- Religion and Science. --- Religion. --- Spirituality. --- Theology. --- Physiology. --- Religious aspects.
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Prior to her heroic efforts in nursing during the Crimean War, Florence Nightingale experienced tremendous psychological and spiritual anguish as she struggled to answer what she believed to be a divine call to service. Traveling to Egypt and Greece in 1849-50, she recorded her thoughts in a diary which has never been published in its entirety. Presented with never before published manuscript material and two unusual pieces of short fiction, this work demonstrates that Nightingale gleaned ancient Egyptian, Platonic, and Hermetic philosophy, Christian scripture and the works of poets, mystics, and missionaries in an attempt to understand the nature of God and her role in the divine plan.
Visions. --- Nurses. --- Psychology, --- Religion. --- Parapsychology --- Religion --- Visionaries --- Prayer --- Religious Beliefs --- Religious Ethics --- Beliefs, Religious --- Ethic, Religious --- Prayers --- Religions --- Religious Belief --- Spiritual Therapies --- Secularism --- Factors, Psychological --- Psychological Factors --- Psychological Side Effects --- Psychologists --- Psychosocial Factors --- Side Effects, Psychological --- Factor, Psychological --- Factor, Psychosocial --- Factors, Psychosocial --- Psychological Factor --- Psychological Side Effect --- Psychologist --- Psychosocial Factor --- Side Effect, Psychological --- Nursing Personnel --- Personnel, Nursing --- Registered Nurses --- Nurse --- Nurse, Registered --- Nurses, Registered --- Registered Nurse --- Nightingale, Florence, --- フローレンスナイチンゲール, --- Diaries. --- Psychology.
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Philosophy, Nursing. --- Nursing Theory. --- Nursing Care. --- Religion. --- Ethics, Nursing. --- Nursing Ethics --- Ethic, Nursing --- Nursing Ethic --- Nurses --- Nursing --- Prayer --- Religious Beliefs --- Religious Ethics --- Beliefs, Religious --- Ethic, Religious --- Prayers --- Religions --- Religious Belief --- Spiritual Therapies --- Secularism --- Care, Nursing --- Management, Nursing Care --- Nursing Care Management --- Disease --- Patient Care --- Theory, Nursing --- Nursing Theories --- Theories, Nursing --- Nursing Philosophy --- Nursing Philosophies --- Philosophies, Nursing --- ethics --- nursing --- Theses --- Caring --- Existential psychology --- Nurse and patient --- Nursing ethics --- Ethics, Nursing --- Nursing Care --- Nursing Theory --- Philosophy, Nursing --- Religion --- Professional ethics --- Medical ethics --- Patient and nurse --- Patients --- Psychology, Existential --- Existentialism --- Phenomenological psychology --- Phenomenology --- Psychoanalysis --- Conduct of life --- Empathy --- Helping behavior --- Philosophy --- Moral and ethical aspects
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Hallucinogenic drugs and religious experience --- Indians --- Rites and ceremonies --- Anthropology, Cultural. --- Hallucinogens. --- Religion. --- 178.8 --- Prayer --- Religious Beliefs --- Religious Ethics --- Beliefs, Religious --- Ethic, Religious --- Prayers --- Religions --- Religious Belief --- Spiritual Therapies --- Secularism --- Hallucinogenic Agents --- Hallucinogenic Drugs --- Hallucinogenic Substances --- Psychedelics --- Psychedelic Agents --- Psychotomimetic Agents --- Agents, Hallucinogenic --- Agents, Psychedelic --- Agents, Psychotomimetic --- Drugs, Hallucinogenic --- Substances, Hallucinogenic --- Hallucinations --- Cultural Anthropology --- Ethnography --- Ethnographies --- Qualitative Research --- Druggebruik --- 178.8 Druggebruik --- Material Culture --- Culture, Material --- Material Cultures --- Hallucinogen --- Hallucinogenic Agent --- Hallucinogenic Drug --- Hallucinogenic Substance --- Psychedelic --- Psychedelic Agent --- Psychotomimetic Agent --- Agent, Hallucinogenic --- Agent, Psychedelic --- Agent, Psychotomimetic --- Drug, Hallucinogenic --- Substance, Hallucinogenic --- Anthropology, Cultural --- Hallucinogens --- Religion --- Indians - Rites and ceremonies
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Family. --- Religion. --- 316:2 --- Family --- -Family --- Families --- Family life --- Family relationships --- Family structure --- Relationships, Family --- Structure, Family --- Social institutions --- Birth order --- Domestic relations --- Home --- Households --- Kinship --- Marriage --- Matriarchy --- Parenthood --- Patriarchy --- Prayer --- Religious Beliefs --- Religious Ethics --- Beliefs, Religious --- Ethic, Religious --- Prayers --- Religions --- Religious Belief --- Spiritual Therapies --- Secularism --- Extended Family --- Family Life Cycle --- Family Research --- Filiation --- Kinship Networks --- Relatives --- Family Life Cycles --- Family Members --- Family, Reconstituted --- Stepfamily --- Extended Families --- Families, Extended --- Families, Reconstituted --- Family Member --- Family, Extended --- Kinship Network --- Life Cycle, Family --- Life Cycles, Family --- Network, Kinship --- Networks, Kinship --- Reconstituted Families --- Reconstituted Family --- Research, Family --- Stepfamilies --- Grandparents --- Godsdienstsociologie --- Religious life --- -Congresses --- Social aspects --- Social conditions --- -Godsdienstsociologie --- 316:2 Godsdienstsociologie --- -316:2 Godsdienstsociologie --- Religion
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Family. --- Religion. --- 316:2 --- #SBIB:316.331H361 --- #SBIB:316.356.2H1300 --- 316:2 Godsdienstsociologie --- Godsdienstsociologie --- Prayer --- Religious Beliefs --- Religious Ethics --- Beliefs, Religious --- Ethic, Religious --- Prayers --- Religions --- Religious Belief --- Spiritual Therapies --- Secularism --- Extended Family --- Family Life Cycle --- Family Research --- Filiation --- Kinship Networks --- Relatives --- Family Life Cycles --- Family Members --- Family, Reconstituted --- Stepfamily --- Extended Families --- Families --- Families, Extended --- Families, Reconstituted --- Family Member --- Family, Extended --- Kinship Network --- Life Cycle, Family --- Life Cycles, Family --- Network, Kinship --- Networks, Kinship --- Reconstituted Families --- Reconstituted Family --- Research, Family --- Stepfamilies --- Grandparents --- Godsdienst en gezin --- Gezin en andere sociale eenheden binnen de samenleving: overheid, school, religie --- Family --- Religion
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Indians of South America --- Indiens d'Amérique --- Periodicals --- Religion and mythology --- Missions --- Périodiques --- social sciences --- andes --- archeology --- history --- anthropology --- Indians of South America. --- Religion. --- Religious Missions. --- Indians, South American. --- Religion --- Missions. --- Andes Region. --- Amerinds, South American --- American Amerind, South --- American Amerinds, South --- American Indian, South --- American Indians, South --- Amerind, South American --- Indian, South American --- South American Amerind --- South American Amerinds --- South American Indian --- South American Indians --- Mission, Religious --- Missions, Religious --- Religious Mission --- Medical Missions --- Monks --- Nuns --- Missionaries --- Prayer --- Religious Beliefs --- Religious Ethics --- Beliefs, Religious --- Ethic, Religious --- Prayers --- Religions --- Religious Belief --- Spiritual Therapies --- Secularism --- American aborigines --- American Indians --- Indigenous peoples --- Industries --- Ethnology --- Acuerdo de Cartagena countries --- Andean countries --- Andean region --- Peuples autochtones
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Religions --- Cultural pluralism --- Religion --- Cultural Diversity --- 291.1 --- 291.16 --- Cultural Pluralism --- Multiculturalism --- Pluralism --- Cultural Diversities --- Diversities, Cultural --- Diversity, Cultural --- Multiculturalisms --- Pluralism, Cultural --- Pluralisms --- Ethical Relativism --- Prayer --- Religious Beliefs --- Religious Ethics --- Beliefs, Religious --- Ethic, Religious --- Prayers --- Religious Belief --- Spiritual Therapies --- Secularism --- Cultural diversity --- Diversity, Religious --- Ethnic diversity --- Pluralism (Social sciences) --- Religious diversity --- Culture --- Cultural fusion --- Ethnicity --- Comparative religion --- Denominations, Religious --- Religion, Comparative --- Religions, Comparative --- Religious denominations --- World religions --- Civilization --- Gods --- 291.16 Verhouding tussen de godsdiensten. Verdraagzaamheid. Interreligieuze dialoog --- Verhouding tussen de godsdiensten. Verdraagzaamheid. Interreligieuze dialoog --- 291.1 Godsdienstfilosofie --- Godsdienstfilosofie --- Religious studies
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