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Showing papers on "Supreme Being published in 1991"


Book
01 Jan 1991
TL;DR: The forbidden books of pre-revolutionary France as discussed by the authorsuret: The French revolution or pure democracy Norman Hampson: The heavenly city of the French revolutionaries Colin Jones: Bourgeois revolution revivified: 1789 and social change Louis Bergeron: The revolution: catastrophe or new dawn for the French economy? Michel Vovelle: The adventures of reason, or from reason to the supreme being Alan Forrest: Regionalism and counter-revolution in France T.C.W. Blanning: the French revolution and Europe
Abstract: Robert Darnton: The forbidden books of pre-revolutionary France Francois Furet: The French revolution or pure democracy Norman Hampson: The heavenly city of the French revolutionaries Colin Jones: Bourgeois revolution revivified: 1789 and social change Louis Bergeron: The revolution: catastrophe or new dawn for the French economy? Michel Vovelle: The adventures of reason, or from reason to the supreme being Alan Forrest: Regionalism and counter-revolution in France T.C.W. Blanning: The French revolution and Europe

14 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: Birnbaum et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed that sociology of religion can effectively inform principles and strategies for clinical intervention, as well as strengthen and enrich basic propositions of clinical sociology and sociological practice.
Abstract: Although religious concerns are generally not clients' primary presenting problems in secular therapists' practices, religious beliefs and values can have a strong influence on clients' behavior and clinical progress For this reason, knowledge about religion and its impact can be useful in intervention work Three case studies illustrate how sociology of religion can be a substantive resource in clinical sociology and sociological practice In this paper, religion is defined as a belief system of denominational, sectarian or secular values which explains natural and supernatural phenomena As the concept of a supreme being is central in most Western belief systems, the three clients' perceptions of their relationships with a supreme being are examined Clients' concepts of God are used to demonstrate the process by which clinical strategies can increase the meaningfulness of clients' choices of secular and religious values and their awareness of the consequences of holding specific beliefs for their everyday behavior The three clinical examples are based on life history data of contrasting patterns of behavior resulting from individual allegiances to different religious belief systems These contrasts are summarized as patterns of "Deference/Fatalism," "Self as Equal to God," and "Copartner with Powerful God" It is proposed that sociology of religion can effectively inform principles and strategies for clinical intervention, as well as strengthen and enrich basic propositions of clinical sociology Religion was intensively studied by nineteenth century and early twentieth century sociologists, as well as by philosophers before that time (Birnbaum An earlier version of this paper was presented at the 1990 annual meeting of the Sociological Practice Association

2 citations