Spelling suggestions: "subject:"dew gge bmovement"" "subject:"dew gge comovement""
31 |
Ideas of Order: The Meaning and Appeal of Contemporary Astrological BeliefThornton, Tracy 27 October 2016 (has links)
Astrology is a belief system that has existed for almost 2,500 years. This enduring form of belief has not been effectively studied by scholars and thus we know little about why beliefs commonly stigmatized as superstitions continue to appeal to people today. My research, based on fieldwork and interviews with astrologers in the Portland, Oregon area, demonstrates that the longevity of this belief system may be attributed to its ability to provide meaning and purpose to people. Throughout history, astrology has been adapted to and has evolved within the cultures in which it exists, and its latest adaptation reveals a close connection to the New Age movement. Astrological worldviews, which assume a correlation between predictable celestial cycles and human activity, are rooted in a premise of fatalism, but this analysis reveals a nuanced view of fate that often is empowering rather than limiting.
|
32 |
Signs and Wonders: Reason and Religion in Social TurmoilMurray, Kimberly D. 21 April 2004 (has links)
No description available.
|
33 |
De afgodendienst in het boek Hosea vergeleken met het nieuwe-tijdsdenkenHeino, Gerrit 11 1900 (has links)
Text in Dutch / In deze verhandeling worden een aantal perikopen uit het boek Hosea, namelijk Hosea 2, 4, 5:1-7, 8, 9, 10 en 14:2-9, uitgelegd aan de hand van het kemwoord afgodendienst. Vergelijk: de afgodendienst in het boek Hosea. Tevens wordt een beschrijving gegeven van de New
Age-beweging en wordt een aantal zienswijzen van deze beweging uitgediept. Vergelijk: het nieuwe-tijdsdenken. Het doel van deze verhandeling is het vergelijken van de afgodendienst in het boek Hosea met het nieuwe-tijdsdenken en de overeenkomsten aan te geven. Vergelijk: vergeleken met.
In hoofdstuk 1 (Probleemstelling en hypothese) wordt het probleem aan de orde gesteld dat de Kanaanitische natuurgodsdienst de Israelitische godsdienst binnengedrongen was en leidde tot afgodendienst. Tevens wordt gesteld dat heden ten dage de godskennis minimaal is, kerken
leeglopen maar semi-godsdiensten zich mogen verheugen in een enorme toeloop. De New Age-beweging is hiervan een voorbeeld. Elementen uit de gedachtewereld van de afgodendienst ten tijde van de profeet Hosea blijken overeen te komen met denkbeelden die deel uitmaken van het nieuwe-tijdsdenken.
In hoofdstuk 2 (Werkwijze) wordt de weg aangegeven die in deze verhandeling gevolgd is om te komen tot het beschrijven van de overeenkomsten tussen de afgodendienst in het boek Hosea en het nieuwe-tijdsdenken.
In hoofdstuk 3 ((Godsdienst)geschiedschrijving) wordt een aantal benaderingen besproken die kunnen leiden tot een evenwichtige beschrijving van de geschiedenis van een godsdienst. Tevens wordt aangegeven waarvan de geschiedschrijver gebruik moet maken om tot een zo objectief mogelijke beschrijving te komen.
In hoofdstuk 4 (De geschiedenis van Israel en Juda in de achtste eeuw voor Christus) wordt de geschiedenis van Israel en Juda in de achtste eeuw voor Christus beschreven aan de hand van de regeringen van de koningen Uzzia, Jotam, Achaz en Jechizkia van Juda en Jerobeam van
Israel. Age-beweging is hiervan een voorbeeld. Elementen uit de gedachtewereld van de afgodendienst ten tijde van de profeet Hosea blijken overeen te komen met denkbeelden die deel uitmaken van het nieuwe-tijdsdenken.
In hoofdstuk 2 (Werkwijze) wordt de weg aangegeven die in deze verhandeling gevolgd is om te komen tot het beschrijven van de overeenkomsten tussen de afgodendienst in het boek Hosea en het nieuwe-tijdsdenken.
In hoofdstuk 3 ((Godsdienst)geschiedschrijving) wordt een aantal benaderingen besproken die kunnen leiden tot een evenwichtige beschrijving van de geschiedenis van een godsdienst. Tevens wordt aangegeven waarvan de geschiedschrijver gebruik moet maken om tot een zo objectief mogelijke beschrijving te komen.
In hoofdstuk 4 (De geschiedenis van Israel en Juda in de achtste eeuw voor Christus) wordt de geschiedenis van Israel en Juda in de achtste eeuw voor Christus beschreven aan de hand van de regeringen van de koningen Uzzia, Jotam, Achaz en Jechizkia van Juda en Jerobeam van
Israel.
In hoofdstuk 5 (De geschiedenis van Israels godsdienst in de achtste eeuw voor Christus) wordt allereerst J erobeam I ten tonele gevoerd omdat hij de drijvende kracht was achter de ontwikkeling van Betel en Dan tot nationale heiligdommen in het noordelijke Israel. Deze
ontwikkeling kan gezien worden als de aanleiding van de afgodendienst ten tijde van Hosea. Vervolgens wordt de invloed van de Kanaanitische godsdienst op de Israelitische godsdienst aan de orde gesteld.
In hoofdstuk 6 (De profeet Hosea) worden de persoon en de prediking van de profeet Hosea uitgediept.
In hoofdstuk 7 (Uitleg van enkele perikopen uit Hosea) worden de perikopen uit de aanhef van deze samenvatting uitgelegd aan de hand van het kemwoord afgodendienst.
In hoofdstuk 8 (De Kanaanitische god Baal) wordt een aantal facetten van Baal belicht die wellicht kunnen bijdragen tot een beter verstaan van Israels godsdienst in de achtste eeuw voor Christus.
In hoofdstuk 9 (New Age) wordt een beschrijving gegeven van de New Age-beweging en een aantal zienswijzen nader onder de loep genomen.
In hoofdstuk 10 (Gevolgtrekkingen) wordt enerzijds de achtste eeuw voor Christus vergeleken met de post-twintigste eeuw en anderzijds de overeenkomsten opgesomd tussen de afgodendienst in het boek Hosea en het nieuwe-tijdsdenken. / This thesis compares idolatry in Hosea with the New Age movement.
A number of pericopes from Hosea are explained in view of idolatry.
Canaanite nature worship had entered into Israelite religion. Among the kings of Israel in the
eighth century BC, Jeroboam I in particular was the moving force behind the development of
Bethel and Dan into national sanctuaries. This development can be seen as the immediate
cause for idolatry in Hosea's days.
Also nowadays knowledge of God is very poor. There are fewer and fewer churchgoers, but
semi-religions like the New Age movement attract a hugh number of people.
Elements from the realm of thought of idolatry at Hosea's time appear to correspond closely
with concepts that are essential in the New Age movement. / Old Testament & Ancient Near Eastern Studies
|
34 |
Imagining them, reimagining ourselves : a case study of cultural appropriation and the politics of identitySmith-Nolan, Mary K. 07 June 1994 (has links)
Several popular cultural movements emphasizing indigenous spirituality have arisen
in the United States and Europe within the past thirty years. Spiritual discourses attributed
to Native Americans, among other groups, are borrowed by Euro-Americans in search of
alternatives to dominant ideologies. In such a circumstance, Native Americans become part
of a constructed and colonized homogenous category of indigenous people, considered by
Euro-Americans as naturally close to the earth and essentially spiritual. The so-called New
Age movement has, within it, several sub-movements, which are particularly noted for
their emphasis on perceived Native American spiritualism. The Red Cedar Circle, made up
primarily of white Americans, focuses on the Si.si.wiss Medicine of the Pacific Northwest
Coast, and can be described as falling under the definitional heading of the New Age.
The suppression and transformation of the heterogeneous reality of indigenous
societies by the imaginings of the Euro-American dominant, has many ethical implications,
as does cultural appropriation in a situation of major power differentials. Native
communities are becoming increasingly outspoken in their opposition to the practice of
Indian, or pseudo-Indian, religions by non-Natives. Many consider such practices to be
morally suspect. Both Native and non-Native social critics feel that New Age practitioners
involved in appropriated and popularized versions of indigenous religions, are interpreting
and using aspects of traditionally subjugated cultures to meet their own needs. What may
appear to be a harmless search for enlightenment by Europeans and Euro-Americans might
have very real negative consequences for actual Native American lives.
This study is based on participant observation of the Corvallis, Oregon Red Cedar
Circle, and interviews with its members from June of 1991 to April of 1994. Analysis of
data from New Age literature was also conducted, as well as an historical overview of the
'Nobel Savage' myth in Western cultures. Interviews with members of the local Native
American community were carried out for feedback on how a given population of Native
Americans perceives the Euro-American practice of Native spirituality. The data supports
the supposition that cultural borrowing, or appropriation, is both a cause of, and a reaction
to, the instability of cultural identity in late twentieth-century America. / Graduation date: 1995
|
35 |
The social geography of new age spirituality in VancouverMills, Colin Ivor 05 1900 (has links)
It was expected that by the end of the twentieth-century, due to human
achievement and technology, religion would be a mere fading memory in the minds and
the history books of modernized western people. This has been expressed through the
secularization thesis, which describes a “disenchantment” of western culture. Over the
last ten years, however, there has been a growing movement seeking to re-enchant this
culture by exploring and reconsidering religion, myth and spirituality. One of the most
powerful expressions of this is popularly referred to as the New Age Movement. This
thesis looks at the relationship between New Age and secularization theory, examining
the reasons for an apparent turn away from secularization. By using Jacques Ellul’s
interpretation of the history of the sacred, this thesis proposes that far from being a time
of secularization, modernism ushered in an era where the sacred canopy of Christianity
was replaced by a new sacred expression in the form of science and technology. In recent
years, however, the perceived failure of modernism has generated a search for a new set
of sacred expressions in western society. New Age and postmodernism are vehicles
which people are using to initiate this search. Currently both phenomena are looking to
three sources in order to recover meaning and control over life: the past and the distant,
nature and the self. The theoretical challenge New Age and postmodernism represents to
the secularization thesis is made concrete in the geography of the New Age Movement.
This thesis makes a physical connection between the New Age and areas of gentrification,
which contradicts the assumptions of the secularization thesis by proving that an area
which should be highly secularized is in fact a place of spiritual exploration.
|
36 |
Needling the spirit : an investigation of the perceptions and uses of the term Qi by acupuncturists in QuébecReid, Erin M. January 2008 (has links)
The intent of this thesis is to explore the various ways in which acupuncturists trained in Quebec interpret and use the term qi in their practice as healers. It argues that these choices are influenced by the implicit connection between complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) and New Age spirituality. As Asian medical systems such as Chinese medicine carve out a niche within the dominant biomedical health-care system, there is a simultaneous desire to present its medical system as scientifically coherent within the biomedical context and a desire to cater to the New Age orientalist fascination with "traditional" Asian medicine and what is perceived as its inherent spiritual qualities. This study concludes that although Quebecois acupuncturists are well-versed in the historical interpretations of the term qi, as well as its medical applications, there is nevertheless a tendency for these practitioners to understand qi as a part of the framework of their own personal spirituality and the relation of that spirituality to their work as healers. Moreover, it is shown that this tendency is strongly informed by the interface of New Age notions concerning healing and the CAM movement. By situating the study within the cultural milieu of Quebec, the specific religio-historical background of this locale and its effects on these practitioners is also taken into consideration.
|
37 |
A Community of Mystics: A New Zealand New Agers' Identity, Relationship with the Community and Connection with the DivineHampton, Linda Edith January 2008 (has links)
The 'New Age' encompasses many spiritualities, philosophies and alternative religions, such as Spiritualism, Wicca, Paganism and Theosophy, to name a few. Its cultural and ancestral threads, prior to the emergence of the contemporary New Age Movement in the early 1970s, is acknowledged by examining some prominent groups and individuals throughout history.
Many comments on the New Age Movement, in the 1970s, 80s and 90s were dismissive. Through a survey done in 2007 amongst New Agers, for this thesis, those early judgements are examined to determine their relationship to the New Zealand experience. There was found to be divergence from international analysis where New Agers' age was concerned, their presumed connection to the 1960s counterculture, the assumptions that the New Age Movement is exclusively white, that science is a necessary part of belief and that New Age beliefs exist in opposition to cummunity needs.
The focus is on the New Agers' within community, not their separation from it, for separation is a claim some overseas academics promoted as proof that the New Age is anti-community because of its individualism in belief seeking. Through this thesis the New Zealand New Ager is placed in relationship to the global New Age Movement by an academic who is 'of' the movement, not an academic 'outside looking in'.
The experience of belief is looked at through the survey participants' eyes with the aim of claiming those experiences as 'mysticism'. This is approached by examining their 'contact' with the Divine/Godhead,through descriptions of altered/abstract realities. Any exclusivity the major religions have on mysticism is essentially 'removed' and given to the community as a concept attainable by those outside 'religion'; for example, the New Age Movement. The New Ager is seen both in the everydaty reality helping to create community, and although it is impossible to prove/examine coherantly, possibly in an altered/abstract reality/realities.
|
38 |
Gender, Reiki and energetic healing : an exploration of holistic/'New Age' healing in ScotlandMacPherson, Judith Ann January 2004 (has links)
Within, this thesis I provide the first empirical academic study of energetic healing, Reiki and dowsing in central Scotland, with the focus of my research being on the teaching of energetic healing in workshops (the Salisbury and Westbank centres being key locations) and related textual material. This thesis is also a step towards addressing the historical imbalance of writing about New Age beliefs and practices from a predominantly androcentric positioning, as I place emphasis on exploring how gendered spiritualities may be actively constructed in this setting. For as Dominic Corrywright has stated "the web of New Age spiritualities is crucially sustained by the individual and collective weavings of women and this is particularly evident in healing and therapies" (2003: 131). I argue that women's predominance in healing circles has a lot to do with personal projects of redefinition and self-transformation. This sort of 'work on the self does not occur under, as radical feminists Daly (1991) and Sjoo (1994) would state, overarching patriarchal paradigms. Rather 'healing of the self’ is located within fluid "fields of force" (Foucault, 1980). Therefore throughout this thesis I build up a decentralised narrative of power and locate women as active healing agents. In order to construct this narrative I draw from research in the fields of Goddess and women's spiritualities, for here we find useful evaluations of how women re-inscribe their bodies as sacred and empowered through, in the former, imminent ties to the Goddess. I relate my research to Meredith McGuire's empirical study of healing in the American context, where she argues that "If the creation, maintenance and transformation of individuals gender identities are indeed among the foremost identity work to be accomplished, then extensive empirical study of the many contemporary instances of gendered spirituality is very worthwhile" (McGuire, 1994: 254). Hence in the first two chapters of this thesis I engage with feminist and ethnographic theory in general. I argue that discourses of power are multivalent operating within academic, religious, bio-medical and holistic healing circles and at the individual level. For debates abound in relation to, for example, the prioritisation of text over experiential practice - the latter being central to New Age healing in Scotland. I introduce my location as a bothsider, an academic researcher and a practising healer as this positioning has raised its own particular set of theoretical and personal questions. And I draw in the aforementioned research in the parallel fields of Goddess and women's spiritualities. Chapter three engages with representations of "the body as energetic" at the micro 'in the field' level and is primarily descriptive. Within these pages I provide a picture of how the energetic body is discursively constructed hence providing some necessary background for later ethnographic material. In chapter four I also build on the previous chapter in relation to healing and curing models of health. I adopt Meredith McGuire's analytical framework of healing types. In this way I can locate my narrative of women's power and consciousness of healing into the debates between male dominated biomedical approaches to health and the apparently more egalitarian holistic (mind, body and spirit) approaches to the same. Chapters five and six focus specifically on the healing practice and discourses of Reiki, this healing modality growing significantly in popularity in Scotland. I will propose that Reiki provides the practitioner with contrasting notions of "the healthy body" to biomedical and mainstream religious significations of the same and enables the development of empowered models of subjectivity "as healer". The technique of dowsing, which is explored in chapter seven, is regarded in healing circles as being a "visible expression" of intuitive practice. Hence learning to dowse appears to provide additional confirmation for women healers of their ability to work as more autonomous agents. For dowsing practice falls within the umbrella of earth mysteries or Gaian traditions, where the earth is seen to be a conscious, living, self-regulating entity and is identified with as the "Goddess imminent". In the final chapter I pull this thesis together as a whole and return to some of the questions asked in my opening material, noting my distinctive contributions to healing research as "a bothsider". Throughout I acknowledge that my location as 'researcher/healer' is just as materially and politically located as are healers in the field. For I, as well as 'the subjects under study', operate within fluid fields of force. Overall, I place emphasis on evaluating distributions of power and the development of new liberating models of subjectivity in healing epistemologies.
|
39 |
A study of the New Age, specifically the phenomena of channeling, past-life recall, and near-death experiences, from a feminist perspectiveDuckett, Valeire Kim. January 1997 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Union Institute, 1997. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 400-415).
|
40 |
Relating creation spirituality to Lutheranism : viewed from the perspective of education for social change : this dissertation is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy to the faculty and board of the Western Institute for Social Research (WISR), Berkeley, California /Jackson, Marilyn E. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Western Institute for Social Research, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 261-268).
|
Page generated in 0.0815 seconds