33 research outputs found

    Christian Religion in the West: Privatization or Public Revitalization?

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    1. Introduction “After nearly three centuries of utterly failed prophesies and misrepresentations of both present and past, it seems time to carry the secularization doctrine to the graveyard of failed theories, and there to whisper ‘requiescat in pace’” (Stark 1999: 269). Stark’s words, published just before the turn of the century, may count on much approval among sociologists of religion today. Secularization theory has been discredited because of its inability to account for religious change in the modern world (e.g., Berger, 1999; Heelas and Woodhead, 2005; Houtman and Mascini, 2002) and because of its sheer broadness and lack of specificity, as emphasized by Hadden (1987: 587), for instance, when he noted that it is a “hotchpotch of loosely employed ideas rather than a systematic theory”. Secularization theory’s two principal subtheses, the ‘decline-of-religion thesis’ and the ‘privatization thesis’ (Casanova, 1994), have both become increasingly contested and recent research even suggests that these two aspects of secularization may develop in a remarkably uneven way. That idea is put forward by Achterberg et al. (2009), who point out that the decline of Christian religion in the West spawns its public revitalization rather than its further privatization. This paper elaborates on this by assessing the empirical merits of two objections that suggest that these recent findings may after all not contradict the established notion that religious decline and religious privatization occur in tandem

    Gender differences in respiratory symptoms in 19-year-old adults born preterm

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    Objective: To study the prevalence of respiratory and atopic symptoms in (young) adults born prematurely, differences between those who did and did not develop Bronchopulmonary Disease (BPD) at neonatal age and differences in respiratory health between males and females. Methods: Design: Prospective cohort study. Setting: Nation wide follow-up study, the Netherlands. Participants: 690 adults (19 year old) born with a gestational age below 32 completed weeks and/or with a birth weight less than 1500g. Controls were Dutch participants of the European Community Respiratory Health Survey (ECRHS). Main outcome measures: Presence of wheeze, shortness of breath, asthma, hay fever and eczema using the ECRHS-questionnaire

    Plasma lipid profiles discriminate bacterial from viral infection in febrile children

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    Fever is the most common reason that children present to Emergency Departments. Clinical signs and symptoms suggestive of bacterial infection ar

    Oorsprong en opbouw van de Salix pentandra-populatie op Schiermonnikoog

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    The Salix pentandra population on the Dutch Wadden island of Schiermonnikoog has been the subject of this study. Chiefly age class composition and sex ratio have been investigated, as well as the distribution of age and sex over the total range. A hypothesis concerning the origin of S. pentandra on the island is proposed. In about 1920 the first two S. pentandra specimens reached Schiermonnikoog, probably as seed. These were both females, so no sexual reproduction took place at all. Not until 1940 a male specimen came to the island and from 1946 onwards the population started to grow exponentially. At the moment the population of this willow counts c. 900 specimens on the island, mainly growing in the central, moist, fresh dune valleys. The oldest specimen now is c. 60 years, and c. 30% of the whole population is between 1 and 10 years old. Most younger specimens are found in the eastern part of the area, in dune valleys which have recently developed. The average sex ratio is 7♀ /4♂, which holds for most age groups as well as for most parts of the population. Solely in the most eastern part of the area with some brackish influence more males were counted than females. Males are usually somewhat bigger and taller than females of the same age

    Diseases of the maxillary sinus: an overview for the dentists

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    Because of the intimate relationship between the upper dentition and the maxillary sinus, it is no surprise that inflammatory, cystic and neoplastic odontogenic diseases may extend into the maxillary sinus and, occasionally, into the nasal cavity. On the other hand, diseases of the maxillary sinus may extend into the oral cavity or may cause symptoms that mimic those of diseases of odontogenic origin. An overview is presented of the various odontogenic and nonodontogenic diseases that may involve the maxillary sinus

    Diseases of the maxillary sinus: an overview for the dentists

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    Because of the intimate relationship between the upper dentition and the maxillary sinus, it is no surprise that inflammatory, cystic and neoplastic odontogenic diseases may extend into the maxillary sinus and, occasionally, into the nasal cavity. On the other hand, diseases of the maxillary sinus may extend into the oral cavity or may cause symptoms that mimic those of diseases of odontogenic origin. An overview is presented of the various odontogenic and nonodontogenic diseases that may involve the maxillary sinus

    Afwijkingen van de sinus maxillaris: een overzicht

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    Door de nauwe relatie van de gebitselementen met de maxilla en de bodem van de sinus maxillaris is het niet verwonderlijk dat odontogene ontstekingen, odontogene cysten en tumoren die hun oorsprong hebben in het slijmvlies en het bot van de maxilla en het palatum durum zich kunnen uitbreiden in de sinus maxillaris en soms ook in de neus. Ook kunnen ziekteprocessen vanuit de sinus maxillaris zich uitbreiden tot in de mond en zich voordoen als afwijkingen van odontogene aard. Belangrijke afwijkingen aan de sinus maxillaris zijn sinusitis maxillaris, oroantrale communicaties, antrolithen, cysten en neoplasmata

    Afwijkingen van het mondslijmvlies

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