2,059 research outputs found
Congregational bonding social capital and psychological type : an empirical enquiry among Australian churchgoers
This study explores the variation in levels of bonding social capital experienced by individual churchgoers, drawing on data generated by the Australian National Church Life Survey, and employing a five-item measure of church-related bonding social capital. Data provided by 2065 Australian churchgoers are used to test the thesis that individual differences in bonding social capital are related to a psychological model of psychological types (employing the Jungian distinctions). The data demonstrated that higher levels of bonding social capital were found among extraverts (compared with introverts), among intuitive types (compared with sensing types) and among feeling types (compared with thinking types), but no significant differences were found between judging types and perceiving types
The Oswald Clergy Burnout Scale: reliability, factor structure and preliminary application among Australian clergy
This study assesses the Oswald Clergy Burnout Scale (OCBI), the psychometric properties of which have not been previously described. Analysis of responses from a large number (N = 3,012) of ministers in charge of Australian congregations showed that the scale’s internal reliability was satisfactory, and that the scale could be represented by two factors, identified, respectively, as the personal and social aspects of burnout. This structure was supported by confirmatory factor analysis. Several demographic and job-related variables that might relate to burnout were regressed on the total, personal and social factor scores. Age is the predominant (negative) predictor of burnout as measured by the total scale and the personal factor scores. All variables predict burnout as measured by the social factor. However, in all models, the predictor variables account for no more than 5% of the total variance. These findings suggest that demographic factors and working conditions are poor predictors of burnout among clergy
Ba Quadrupole Polarizabilities: Theory versus Experiment
Three different measurements have been reported for the ground state
quadrupole polarizability in the singly ionized barium (Ba) which disagree
with each other. Our calculation of this quantity using the relativistic
coupled-cluster method disagrees with two of the experimental values and is
within the error bars of the other. We discuss the issues related to the
accuracy of our calculations and emphasize the need for further experiments to
measure the quadrupole polarizability for this state and/or the 5D states.Comment: 6 pages, 3 table
The psychological type profile of Christians participating in fellowship groups or in small study groups: Insights from the Australian National Church Life Survey
The Australian National Church Life Survey draws on psychological type theory to facilitate insights into the connection between individual psychological profiles and preferences for different religious expressions. Drawing on data provided by 2355 participants in the 2006 congregation survey, this analysis profiles those members of church congregations who are drawn to participation in small prayer, discussion or Bible study groups, or to participation in fellowship and social groups. The key findings are that extraverts and feeling types are over-represented in the fellowship and social groups and that intuitive types are over-represented in small prayer, discussion or Bible study groups
The psychological-type profile of lay church leaders in Australia
A sample of 845 lay church leaders (444 women and 401 men) from a range of 24 different denominations and movements (including house churches and independent churches) completed the Francis Psychological-Type Scales within the context of the 2006 Australian National Church Life Survey. The psychological-type profiles of these lay church leaders were almost identical to the type profiles of 1527 Australian churchgoers (936 women and 591 men) published in an earlier study by Robbins and Francis. The predominant types among female lay church leaders were ISFJ (21%), ESFJ (21%), and ISTJ (18%). The predominant types among male lay church leaders were ISTJ (28%), ISFJ (17%), ESTJ (13%), and ESFJ (12%). The SJ temperament accounted for 67% of the female lay church leaders and for 70% of the male lay church leaders. The strengths and weaknesses of the SJ leadership style are discussed
Convergence improvement for coupled cluster calculations
Convergence problems in coupled-cluster iterations are discussed, and a new
iteration scheme is proposed. Whereas the Jacobi method inverts only the
diagonal part of the large matrix of equation coefficients, we invert a matrix
which also includes a relatively small number of off-diagonal coefficients,
selected according to the excitation amplitudes undergoing the largest change
in the coupled cluster iteration. A test case shows that the new IPM (inversion
of partial matrix) method gives much better convergence than the
straightforward Jacobi-type scheme or such well-known convergence aids as the
reduced linear equations or direct inversion in iterative subspace methods.Comment: 7 pages, IOPP styl
Broken-Symmetry Unrestricted Hybrid Density Functional Calculations on Nickel Dimer and Nickel Hydride
In the present work we investigate the adequacy of broken-symmetry
unrestricted density functional theory (DFT) for constructing the potential
energy curve of nickel dimer and nickel hydride, as a model for larger bare and
hydrogenated nickel cluster calculations. We use three hybrid functionals: the
popular B3LYP, Becke's newest optimized functional Becke98, and the simple
FSLYP functional (50% Hartree-Fock and 50% Slater exchange and LYP
gradient-corrected correlation functional) with two basis sets: all-electron
(AE) Wachters+f basis set and Stuttgart RSC effective core potential (ECP) and
basis set.
We find that, overall, the best agreement with experiment, comparable to that
of the high-level CASPT2, is obtained with B3LYP/AE, closely followed by
Becke98/AE and Becke98/ECP. FSLYP/AE and B3LYP/ECP give slightly worse
agreement with experiment, and FSLYP/ECP is the only method among the ones we
studied that gives an unaceptably large error, underestimating the dissociation
energy of nickel dimer by 28%, and being in the largest disagreement with the
experiment and the other theoretical predictions.Comment: 17 pages, 7 tables, 7 figures; submitted to J. Chem. Phys.;
Revtex4/LaTeX2e. v2 (8/5/04): New (and better) ECP results, without charge
density fitting (which was found to give large errors). Subtracted the
relativistic corrections from all experimental value
Configuration interaction calculation of hyperfine and P,T-odd constants on ^{207}PbO excited states for the electron EDM experiments
We report first configuration interaction calculations of hyperfine constants
A_\parallel and the effective electric field W_d acting on the electric dipole
moment of the electron, in two excited electronic states of ^{207}PbO. The
obtained hyperfine constants, A_\parallel = -3826 MHz for the a(1) state and
A_\parallel = 4887 MHz for the B(1) state, are in very good agreement with the
experimental data, -4113 MHz and 5000 \pm 200 MHz, respectively. We find W_d =
-(6.1 ^{+1.8}_{-0.6}) 10^{24} Hz/(e cm) for a(1), and W_d = (8.0 \pm 1.6)
10^{24} Hz/(e cm) for B(1). The obtained values are analyzed and compared to
recent relativistic coupled cluster results and a semiempirical estimate of W_d
for the a(1) state.Comment: 6 pages, REVTeX4 style, submitted to Pthys.Rev.
The electron electric dipole moment enhancement factors of Rubidium and Caesium atoms
The enhancement factors of the electric dipole moment (EDM) of the ground
states of two paramagnetic atoms; rubidium (Rb) and caesium (Cs) which are
sensitive to the electron EDM are computed using the relativistic
coupled-cluster theory and our results are compared with the available
calculations and measurements. The possibility of improving the limit for the
electron EDM using the results of our present work is pointed out.Comment: AISAMP7 Conference paper, Accepted in Journal of Physics: Conference
Series: 200
How is rape a weapon of war?: feminist international relations, modes of critical explanation and the study of wartime sexual violence
Rape is a weapon of war. Establishing this now common claim has been an achievement of feminist scholarship and activism and reveals wartime sexual violence as a social act marked by gendered power. But the consensus that rape is a weapon of war obscures important, and frequently unacknowledged, differences in ways of understanding and explaining it. This article opens these differences to analysis. Drawing on recent debates regarding the philosophy of social science in IR and social theory, it interprets feminist accounts of wartime sexual violence in terms of modes of critical explanation – expansive styles of reasoning that foreground particular actors, mechanisms, reasons and stories in the formulation of research. The idea of a mode of critical explanation is expanded upon through a discussion of the role of three elements (analytical wagers, narrative scripts and normative orientations) which accomplish the theoretical work of modes. Substantive feminist accounts of wartime sexual violence are then differentiated in terms of three modes – of instrumentality, unreason and mythology – which implicitly structure different understandings of how rape might be a weapon of war. These modes shape political and ethical projects and so impact not only on questions of scholarly content but also on the ways in which we attempt to mitigate and abolish war rape. Thinking in terms of feminist modes of critical explanation consequently encourages further work in an unfolding research agenda. It clarifes the ways in which an apparently commonality of position can conceal meaningful disagreements about human action. Exposing these disagreements opens up new possibilities for the analysis of war rape
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