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This Special Issue includes articles which discuss the longstanding recognition of diverse connections between spirituality and addiction, as well as emerging discussions regarding the spiritual dimensions of addiction treatments. The overall focus is on the overlaps between the journey into addiction and the spiritual journey, informed by the insight of Carl Jung that addictive craving and the seeking of ultimate meaning may be intimately connected. The multiplicity of forms which addiction can assume in contemporary society are the scope of the issue. The overall purpose of the Special Issue is to extend the range of manifestations of addiction which are part of a discussion relating to the soul of recovery. Through this extended agenda of forms of addiction, the Special Issue supplements existing literature on the subject of spirituality and addiction.
Religion & beliefs --- addiction --- addiction treatment --- Buddhism --- mindfulness --- ontological addiction --- recovery --- Twelve-Step Program --- climate change --- addictions --- eating disorders --- existential psychology --- healing --- Internal Family Systems --- nonduality --- psychotherapy --- transpersonal psychotherapy --- Alcoholics Anonymous --- religiousness --- involvement in self-help groups --- meaning in life --- spiritual experiences --- mediator variable --- workaholism --- workplace spirituality --- worker profiles --- Portuguese employees --- ego --- unique personhood --- ontology --- epistemology --- contemplative traditions --- Western Enlightenment --- developmental psychology --- transcendental reductionism --- Fourth Turning in Buddhism --- Bible journaling --- biblical spirituality --- drug addiction --- journaling addiction --- addiction recovery --- multimodality --- multimodal analysis --- religious beliefs --- religious attitudes --- optimism --- pessimism --- players of games of chance --- spiritual addiction --- faith --- truth --- hope --- reason --- religion --- love --- reality --- collective moral crisis --- n/a
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This Special Issue includes articles which discuss the longstanding recognition of diverse connections between spirituality and addiction, as well as emerging discussions regarding the spiritual dimensions of addiction treatments. The overall focus is on the overlaps between the journey into addiction and the spiritual journey, informed by the insight of Carl Jung that addictive craving and the seeking of ultimate meaning may be intimately connected. The multiplicity of forms which addiction can assume in contemporary society are the scope of the issue. The overall purpose of the Special Issue is to extend the range of manifestations of addiction which are part of a discussion relating to the soul of recovery. Through this extended agenda of forms of addiction, the Special Issue supplements existing literature on the subject of spirituality and addiction.
addiction --- addiction treatment --- Buddhism --- mindfulness --- ontological addiction --- recovery --- Twelve-Step Program --- climate change --- addictions --- eating disorders --- existential psychology --- healing --- Internal Family Systems --- nonduality --- psychotherapy --- transpersonal psychotherapy --- Alcoholics Anonymous --- religiousness --- involvement in self-help groups --- meaning in life --- spiritual experiences --- mediator variable --- workaholism --- workplace spirituality --- worker profiles --- Portuguese employees --- ego --- unique personhood --- ontology --- epistemology --- contemplative traditions --- Western Enlightenment --- developmental psychology --- transcendental reductionism --- Fourth Turning in Buddhism --- Bible journaling --- biblical spirituality --- drug addiction --- journaling addiction --- addiction recovery --- multimodality --- multimodal analysis --- religious beliefs --- religious attitudes --- optimism --- pessimism --- players of games of chance --- spiritual addiction --- faith --- truth --- hope --- reason --- religion --- love --- reality --- collective moral crisis --- n/a
Choose an application
This Special Issue includes articles which discuss the longstanding recognition of diverse connections between spirituality and addiction, as well as emerging discussions regarding the spiritual dimensions of addiction treatments. The overall focus is on the overlaps between the journey into addiction and the spiritual journey, informed by the insight of Carl Jung that addictive craving and the seeking of ultimate meaning may be intimately connected. The multiplicity of forms which addiction can assume in contemporary society are the scope of the issue. The overall purpose of the Special Issue is to extend the range of manifestations of addiction which are part of a discussion relating to the soul of recovery. Through this extended agenda of forms of addiction, the Special Issue supplements existing literature on the subject of spirituality and addiction.
Religion & beliefs --- addiction --- addiction treatment --- Buddhism --- mindfulness --- ontological addiction --- recovery --- Twelve-Step Program --- climate change --- addictions --- eating disorders --- existential psychology --- healing --- Internal Family Systems --- nonduality --- psychotherapy --- transpersonal psychotherapy --- Alcoholics Anonymous --- religiousness --- involvement in self-help groups --- meaning in life --- spiritual experiences --- mediator variable --- workaholism --- workplace spirituality --- worker profiles --- Portuguese employees --- ego --- unique personhood --- ontology --- epistemology --- contemplative traditions --- Western Enlightenment --- developmental psychology --- transcendental reductionism --- Fourth Turning in Buddhism --- Bible journaling --- biblical spirituality --- drug addiction --- journaling addiction --- addiction recovery --- multimodality --- multimodal analysis --- religious beliefs --- religious attitudes --- optimism --- pessimism --- players of games of chance --- spiritual addiction --- faith --- truth --- hope --- reason --- religion --- love --- reality --- collective moral crisis
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