8,272 research outputs found
Measuring attitude toward theistic faith : assessing the Astley-Francis Scale among Christian, Muslim and secular youth in England
Empirical research within the social scientific study of religion in general and within the psychology of religion in particular remains very conscious of the complex nature of its subject matter. Empirical research in this field needs to take cognisance of the many forms in which religion is expressed (say, Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and Sikhism) and the many facets within the forms (say, beliefs, behaviours and affiliation). Working in the 1970s, Francis (1978a; 1978b) advanced the view that the attitudinal dimension of religion offered a particularly fruitful basis for coordinating empirical enquiry into the correlates, antecedents and consequences of religiosity across the life span
The Williams Scale of Attitude toward Paganism: development and application among British Pagans
This article builds on the tradition of attitudinal measures of religiosity established by Leslie Francis and colleagues with the Francis Scale of Attitude toward Christianity (and reflected in the Sahin-Francis Scale of Attitude toward Islam, the Katz-Francis Scale of Attitude toward Judaism, and the Santosh-Francis Scale of Attitude toward Hinduism) by introducing a new measure to assess the attitudinal disposition of Pagans. A battery of items was completed by 75 members of a Pagan Summer Camp. These items were reduced to produce a 21-item scale that measured aspects of Paganism concerned with: the God/Goddess, worshipping, prayer, and coven. The scale recorded an alpha coefficient of 0.93. Construct validity of the Williams Scale of Attitude toward Paganism was demonstrated by the clear association with measures of participation in private rituals
Prayer and psychological health: a study among sixth-form pupils attending Catholic and Protestant schools in Northern Ireland
Eysenck's dimensional model of personality includes two indicators of psychological health, defined as neuroticism and psychoticism. In order to examine the association between psychological health and prayer, two samples of sixth-form pupils in Northern Ireland (16- to 18-year-olds) attending Catholic (N = 1246) and Protestant (N = 1060) schools completed the abbreviated Revised Eysenck Personality Questionnaire alongside a simple measure of prayer frequency. The data demonstrated a positive association between prayer frequency and better levels of psychological health as assessed by Eysenck's notion of psychoticism. Among pupils attending both Catholic and Protestant schools, higher levels of prayer were associated with lower psychoticism scores. Among pupils attending Catholic schools, however, higher levels of prayer were also associated with higher neuroticism scores
Psychological type profile of Methodist circuit ministers in Britain : similarities to and differences from Anglican clergy
Psychological type theory is employed to profile similarities and differences between Methodist ministers in Britain and the Church of England clergy profiled in an earlier study by Francis, Craig, Whinney, Tilley and Slater (2007). New data were provided by 693 male and 311 female Methodist ministers who completed the Francis Psychological Type Scales. These data demonstrated that both male and female Methodist ministers were less likely to prefer intuition, and more likely to prefer sensing, compared to their Anglican colleagues. Also, male Methodist ministers were more likely to prefer feeling and less likely to prefer thinking in comparison with their Anglican colleagues. In other respects, the Methodist ministers and the Anglican clergy recorded similar profiles. These findings are interpreted to illuminate characteristics of strength and weakness in Methodist and Anglican ministry in England and to highlight potential challenges in effecting cooperation between the two denominations
First Results From Sleuth: The Palomar Planet Finder
We discuss preliminary results from our first search campaign for transiting planets performed using Sleuth, an automated 10 cm telescope with a 6 degree square field of view. We monitored a field in Hercules for 40 clear nights between UT 2003 May 10 and July 01, and obtained an rms precision (per 15-min average) over the entire data set of better than 1% on the brightest 2026 stars, and better than 1.5% on the brightest 3865 stars. We identified no strong candidates in the Hercules field. We conducted a blind test of our ability to recover transiting systems by injecting signals into our data and measuring the recovery rate as a function of transit depth and orbital period. About 85% of transit signals with a depth of 0.02 mag were recovered. However, only 50% of transit signals with a depth of 0.01 mag were recovered. We expect that the number of stars for which we can search for transiting planets will increase substantially for our current field in Andromeda, due to the lower Galactic latitude of the field
Introducing the modified paranormal belief scale: distinguishing between classic paranormal beliefs, religious paranormal beliefs and conventional religiosity among undergraduates in Northern Ireland and Wales
Previous empirical studies concerned with the association between paranormal beliefs and conventional religiosity have produced conflicting evidence. Drawing on Rice's (2003) distinction between classic paranormal beliefs and religious paranormal beliefs, the present study proposed a modified form of the Tobacyk Revised Paranormal Belief Scale to produce separate scores for these two forms of paranormal belief, styled 'religious paranormal beliefs' and 'classic paranormal beliefs'. Data provided by a sample of 143 undergraduate students in Northern Ireland and Wales, who completed the Francis Scale of Attitude toward Christianity alongside the Tobacyk Revised Paranormal Belief Scale, demonstrated that conventional religiosity is positively correlated with religious paranormal beliefs, but independent of classic paranormal beliefs. These findings provide a clear framework within which previous conflicting evidence can be interpreted. It is recommended that future research should distinguish clearly between these two forms of paranormal beliefs and that the Tobacyk Revised Paranormal Beliefs Scale should be routinely modified to detach the four religious paranormal belief items from the total scale score
Religious orientation, mental health and culture : conceptual and empirical perspectives
This special edition of Mental Health, Religion and Culture brings together thirteen original empirical studies that employ theories and measures based on the notion of âreligious orientationâ. As originally conceived, Allportâs notion of religious orientation distinguished between the two motivational styles of intrinsic religiosity and extrinsic religiosity. Subsequent work distinguished between extrinsic-personal and extrinsic social motivations, and added the third orientation styled as quest religiosity. The first set of seven studies draws on a variety of measures of religious orientation developed since the mid-1960s, including single-item measures. The second set of six studies draws on the New Indices of Religious Orientation proposed by Francis in 2007. Collectively these studies confirm the continuing vitality of the notion of religious orientation for informing empirical research within the psychology of religion and strengthen the foundation for future work in this area
More on heavy tetraquarks in lattice QCD at almost physical pion mass
We report on our progress in studying exotic, heavy tetraquark states,
. Using publicly available dynamical
Wilson-Clover gauge configurations, generated by the PACS-CS collaboration,
with pion masses 164, 299 and 415 MeV, we extend our previous analysis
to heavy quark components containing heavier than physical bottom quarks or , charm and bottom quarks and also only charm quarks
. Throughout we employ NRQCD and relativistic heavy quarks for
the heavier than bottom, bottom and charm quarks. Using our previously
established diquark-antidiquark and meson-meson operator basis we comment in
particular on the dependence of the binding energy on the mass of the heavy
quark component , with heavy quarks ranging from . In the heavy flavor non-degenerate case, ,
and especially for the tetraquark channel , we extend our work
to utilize a GEVP to study the ground and threshold states thereby
enabling a clear identification of possible binding. Finally, we present
initial work on the system where a much
larger operator basis is available in comparison to flavor combinations with
NRQCD quarks.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, proceedings contribution to "Lattice 2017. 35th
International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory", 18th-24th June 2017,
Granada, Spai
Evidence for charm-bottom tetraquarks and the mass dependence of heavy-light tetraquark states from lattice QCD
We continue our study of heavy-light four-quark states and find evidence from
lattice QCD for the existence of a strong-interaction-stable
tetraquark with mass in the range of 15 to 61 MeV below
threshold. Since this range includes the electromagnetic
decay threshold, current uncertainties do not allow us to
determine whether such a state would decay electromagnetically, or only weakly.
We also perform a study at fixed pion mass, with NRQCD for the heavy quarks,
simulating and tetraquarks with or
and variable, unphysical in order to investigate the heavy
mass-dependence of such tetraquark states. We find that the dependence of the
binding energy follows a phenomenologically-expected form and that, though
NRQCD breaks down before is reached, the results at higher
clearly identify the channel as the
most likely to support a strong-interaction-stable tetraquark state at
. This observation serves to motivate the direct
simulation. Throughout we use dynamical ensembles
with pion masses 415, 299, and 164 MeV reaching down almost to the
physical point, a relativistic heavy quark prescription for the charm quark,
and NRQCD for the bottom quark(s).Comment: 24 pages, 4 figure
Dark Matter from Strong Dynamics: The Minimal Theory of Dark Baryons
As a simple model for dark matter, we propose a QCD-like theory based on
gauge theory with one flavor of dark quark. The model is confining
at low energy and we use lattice simulations to investigate the properties of
the lowest-lying hadrons. Compared to QCD, the theory has several peculiar
differences: there are no Goldstone bosons or chiral symmetry restoration when
the dark quark becomes massless; the usual global baryon number symmetry is
enlarged to , resembling isospin; and baryons and mesons are
unified together in iso-multiplets. We argue that the lightest
baryon, a vector boson, is a stable dark matter candidate and is a composite
realization of the hidden vector dark matter scenario. The model naturally
includes a lighter state, the analog of the in QCD, for dark
matter to annihilate into to set the relic density via thermal freeze-out. Dark
matter baryons may also be asymmetric, strongly self-interacting, or have their
relic density set via cannibalizing transitions. We discuss some
experimental implications of coupling dark baryons to the Higgs portal.Comment: 26 pages, 16 figure
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