Results 71 to 80 of about 4,075 (265)
No one should die alone: “Just holding hands” among vigil volunteers in Denmark
Abstract A wealth of societal concerns about loneliness has surfaced in recent years, raising questions about the negative impacts of increasing social lacks. Exploring a widespread saying among Danish vigil volunteers that “No one should die alone,” we ask: What is at stake in this concern with lonely deaths? And how is relationality practiced at life'
Lone Grøn, Laura Skifter Andersen
wiley +1 more source
Philosophical and theological influences in John Calvin’s thought: reviewing some research results
B.J. Van der Walt
openalex +2 more sources
Philosophical Principles of Heinrich Klee’s Theology (1800–1840)
Alexander Anatolyevich Fokin
openalex +2 more sources
Affecting with and being affected by person‐centered interviewing and observation
Abstract Person‐centered interviewing and observation—an ethnographic approach that attempts to describe and represent human behavior and subjectivity from the point of view of the acting, desiring, intending, sensing, reflecting, and attentive subject—inevitably engages the emotions and memories of ethnographers and subjects alike as they interact and
Douglas Hollan
wiley +1 more source
The prospects of Theological-Philosophical Dialogue in Post-Soviet Protestantism
Mykhailo Cherenkov
openalex +2 more sources
Trauma, sociogenesis, and the work of societal healing after conflict: “All Rwandans are wounded”
Abstract This article explores recurring problems in post‐conflict studies of trauma through the lens of evolving discourses of psychic woundedness in post‐genocide Rwanda. Research suggests that global psychiatric discourses did not enter the Rwandan public sphere until after the 1994 Genocide Against the Tutsi, at which point local iterations of ...
Zoë Elizabeth Berman
wiley +1 more source