Mental Health and ReligionThe author explores religious behaviour and provides a guide for those helping the mentally ill. |
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Page 31
... close to God the Trinity , which incorporated elements of his relationship to his father and mother as a couple . It was his mother who was ' supreme ' throughout his childhood . She was there ' all the time ' to ' see all things ...
... close to God the Trinity , which incorporated elements of his relationship to his father and mother as a couple . It was his mother who was ' supreme ' throughout his childhood . She was there ' all the time ' to ' see all things ...
Page 73
... close friend or family members , and all seem to have been depressed just prior to their subsequent involvement in mystical , cabbalistic study and practice . The dreams and hallucinations precipitated by their mysticism were at first ...
... close friend or family members , and all seem to have been depressed just prior to their subsequent involvement in mystical , cabbalistic study and practice . The dreams and hallucinations precipitated by their mysticism were at first ...
Page 143
... close - knit religious groups . SPIRITUAL SUPPORT Harris ( unpublished ) presented material collected in the course of study of social causes of depression in women in the Heb- rides . Many of the women described feelings of closeness ...
... close - knit religious groups . SPIRITUAL SUPPORT Harris ( unpublished ) presented material collected in the course of study of social causes of depression in women in the Heb- rides . Many of the women described feelings of closeness ...
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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Common terms and phrases
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 |