An Introduction to Psychology of Religion

Cover
Mercer University Press, 1986 - 408 Seiten
Developed in almost thirty years of classroom experience, this book is designed to introduce students and other readers to the psychological study of religion. Robert W. Crapps deals with the major questions and figures that have dominated the psychological study of religion over the past century, dividing the discussion into four parts. Two chapters in part one suggest the problems and possibilities for the psychological study of religion in light of the nature of religion and the scientific method. Part two sketches the contributions to the study of religion of three intellectual currents in contemporary psychology: psychoanalysis, behaviorism, and humanistic psychology. part three explores the relationship between religion and human development, while part four directs attention to religious lifestyles and that weave differentiated parts of human experience into a cohesive whole. -- Publisher description.
 

Inhalt

III
3
IV
7
V
10
VI
14
VII
23
VIII
30
IX
31
X
33
XLVII
187
XLIX
188
L
207
LI
214
LII
223
LIII
225
LV
228
LVI
233

XI
38
XII
44
XIII
47
XIV
59
XV
61
XVIII
63
XIX
64
XX
74
XXI
80
XXII
83
XXIII
88
XXIV
91
XXV
93
XXVII
95
XXVIII
96
XXIX
98
XXX
103
XXXI
120
XXXII
124
XXXIII
127
XXXV
129
XXXVI
140
XXXVII
148
XXXVIII
156
XXXIX
157
XL
159
XLI
161
XLII
162
XLIII
172
XLIV
177
XLV
183
XLVI
185
LVII
249
LVIII
251
LX
253
LXI
256
LXII
264
LXIII
269
LXIV
279
LXV
281
LXVII
285
LXVIII
299
LXIX
305
LXX
307
LXXIII
308
LXXIV
319
LXXV
325
LXXVI
327
LXXIX
328
LXXX
332
LXXXI
335
LXXXII
341
LXXXIII
345
LXXXIV
350
LXXXV
353
LXXXVI
354
LXXXVII
357
LXXXVIII
361
LXXXIX
366
XC
367
XCI
369
XCII
397
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Seite 27 - TO be converted, to be regenerated, to receive grace, to experience religion, to gain an assurance, are so many phrases which denote the process, gradual or sudden, by which a self hitherto divided, and consciously •wrong inferior and unhappy, becomes unified and consciously right superior and happy, in consequence of its firmer hold upon religious realities.

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