Mental Health and ReligionThe author explores religious behaviour and provides a guide for those helping the mentally ill. |
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Page 58
... gospel . Nor does the vicar . He has enough to do looking after the flock he has . Less established religious groups , by contrast , actually need new members . Olson ( 1989 ) in a study of Baptists in the USA found that newer churches ...
... gospel . Nor does the vicar . He has enough to do looking after the flock he has . Less established religious groups , by contrast , actually need new members . Olson ( 1989 ) in a study of Baptists in the USA found that newer churches ...
Page 166
... gospel to a people who had forgotten it and to bring them back to Christ . Although deeply religious , she is certainly not sanctimonious and can laugh at herself and others . A travel poster in our waiting room has been embellished by ...
... gospel to a people who had forgotten it and to bring them back to Christ . Although deeply religious , she is certainly not sanctimonious and can laugh at herself and others . A travel poster in our waiting room has been embellished by ...
Page 180
... Gospel . However she moved stepwise toward acknowl- edging that the ' law ' she feared was the ' Jewish ' psycho- analyst's uncanny ability to read her thoughts - which chal- lenged her Catholic supremacy and her omnipotence , and ...
... Gospel . However she moved stepwise toward acknowl- edging that the ' law ' she feared was the ' Jewish ' psycho- analyst's uncanny ability to read her thoughts - which chal- lenged her Catholic supremacy and her omnipotence , and ...
Contents
Definitions of mental health and of religion | 7 |
A general framework for understanding some causes | 19 |
Communities where noone goes mad? | 44 |
Copyright | |
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American anxiety appear aspects associated attention attitudes attributional become behaviour beliefs body British Brown cause chapter child Christian church cognitive conversion deal depression described difficulties discussed disorder distress effects evidence example expect experience factors faith father feelings felt forms Freud friends gender given guilt ideas important interest involved issues Jewish Journal kind less living London looked marriage married means measures mental health mental illness mother mystical parents particularly patient perceived person positive possible practices prayer Press problems professionals psychiatric psychological psychopathology psychotherapy question reason relationship reli religion religious reported result role seen social societies spiritual stress subjects suffering suggested symptoms tell theory therapist therapy things thought traditional types understanding values women York young
References to this book
Psychiatry and Religion: Context, Consensus and Controversies Dinesh Bhugra No preview available - 1997 |