3,722 research outputs found

    Experiences of “Soul Journeys” in the World’s Religions: The Journeys of Mohammed, Saints Paul and John, Jewish Chariot Mysticism, Taoism’s Highest Clarity School, and Shamanism.

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    “Soul journeys” are a central practice of shamanism. However, they have also been important in many other religious traditions and have exerted a major impact on religions, cultures, and history. This article surveys some important journeys in the world’s religions such as those of Mohammed, the Christian saints Paul and John, Jewish Chariot Mysticism, Taoism’s Highest Clarity tradition, and shamanism. The article explores the experiences of these journeys, techniques for inducing them, culturally specific features, and the range of metaphysical interpretations of them. It also examines some of the surprising ways in which journeys are currently impacting Western culture, ranging from political movements to our understanding of states of mind

    Entheogens: True or False?

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    Despite 40 years of dialogue, debate still continues over whether psychedelics are capable of inducing genuine mystical experiences. This paper first reviews the arguments against this possibility and shows that all of them contain shortcomings. One reason the debate still continues is that there has been no adequate theory of mystical states and their relationship to the factors which produce them. Consequently a theory of mystical states based on Charles Tart’s systems model of consciousness is proposed. This theory suggests how identical states of consciousness can be induced by very different means, including contemplative practices and chemical substances, and yet have different after-effects. Taken together, these ideas lead to the cautious conclusion that some psychedelics can induce genuine mystical experiences sometimes in some people, and that the current tendency to label these chemicals as entheogens may be appropriate

    A Metric Inequality for the Thompson and Hilbert Geometries

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    There are two natural metrics defined on an arbitrary convex cone: Thompson's part metric and Hilbert's projective metric. For both, we establish an inequality giving information about how far the metric is from being non-positively curved.Comment: 15 pages, 0 figures. To appear in J. Inequalities Pure Appl. Mat

    Lifestyle and mental health.

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    Positive psychology: East and West.

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    Health Care and Change Management in the Context of Prisons: Rapid reviews of the literature in two parts

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    First paragraph: The literature review of factors promoting or inhibiting change finds that there is no unified science of change management and that there is a general lack of empirical evidence across the board about change management in all domains of human industry. - We have proposed a general five-level evidence framework that can be used to categorise broadly the quality of evidence for and commission research into prison management. - We argue that proposals for change should be subjected to a formal decision making process in keeping with good practice in decision making in which alternatives to the proposed change are also evaluated. - We find that change can occur to structures, processes, outcomes and people (table 6) in planned or unintended ways, gradually or radically. - Despite the lack of empirical evidence we find that there is a broad consensus on the features of successful change management approaches
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