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Lucy Bregman Ph.D. 《Journal of religion and health》1979,18(3):213-229
Anton Boisen was both a psychologist of religion and a schizophrenic. His autobiography presents his case history but leaves many of his psychotic communications and experiences uninterpreted. This essay attempts to account for Boisen's most idiosyncratic psychotic products, drawing on theories of Jung and Bateson. Boisen and Jung both used experiences deriving from psychotic episodes to shape their subsequent life work. Boisen remained within liberal Protestantism, relinquishing his own crazy critique of Christianity developed during his mental illness. This critique is expressed through Boisen's notion of the Family of Four, a plan for world renewal that he himself never adequately interpreted. 相似文献
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Douglas B. Olds 《Pastoral Psychology》2009,58(4):417-432
This paper introduces a kenotic theory of conversion that builds from simple attachment to childhood experience of peak states
to encompass dialectical stages of development: Priming, Decentering, Reflection, Encounter, Denucleation, Emplacement and
Discipline. Thereafter, the dialectical mode gives rise to the mature phase of conversion—the continuing integration of the
religious worldview through Metamorphosis and Embassy. The conversion theory is illustrated by an interpretation of a dialectical
set of experiences of Anton Boisen. I interpret Anton Boisen’s conversion from a 19th Century Christianity that was wedded
to religious and racial manifest destiny to that of a reborn Christian living with the 20th Century’s experience of evangelical
and evolutionary universalism. Boisen’s clinical desolations (“psychosis”) and adoption of vocation (“change of allegiance”)
suggest his conversion counterposed the instinctual with the higher order ideals he struggled to embody—a dialectical negation
of his younger static and triumphalist Christian cultural identity that developed into a more integrated, expansive, and inclusive
view of the human family and deepening allegiance to the ordinary, underserved, and growing population of the mentally suffering.
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Douglas B. OldsEmail: |
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Curtis W. Hart 《Journal of religion and health》2008,47(1):118-128
J. Robert Oppenheimer was among the most important and enigmatic figures in 20th century science. He is best known for successfully
directing the Manhattan Project that produced the first atomic bombs that were dropped on Japan at the end of World War II.
Subsequently, he became a scientist and statesman who advised the United States government in the areas of atomic weapons
development and public policy. He later became subject to an investigation in 1954 into his previous political affiliations
and his personal behavior that ended in the revoking of his security clearance. This essay seeks to chronicle Oppenheimer’s
coming of age as a public intellectual with a view toward his own psychological history and most especially in relationship
to the stages of faith development articulated by James Fowler and colleagues. Moreover, though not conventionally religious,
Oppenheimer’s life and thought were permeated with themes and ideas of a religious and ethical nature that shaped his adult
character and informed his view of the world. This essay was originally presented at The Richardson History of Psychiatry
Research Seminar at Weill Cornell Medical College. 相似文献
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