106 research outputs found
RITUAL, TIME, AND ENTERNITY
It is argued here that the construction of time and eternity are among ritual's entailments. In dividing continuous duration into distinct periods ritual distinguishes two temporal conditions: (1) that prevailing in mundane periods and (2) that prevailing during the intervals between them. Differences in the frequency, length, and relationship among the rituals constituting different liturgical orders are considered, as are differences between mundane periods and ritual's intervals with respect to social relations, cognitive modes, meaningfulness, and typical interactive frequencies. Periods, it is observed, relate to intervals as everchanging to never-changing, and close relationships of never changing to eternity, eternity to sanctity, and sanctity to truth are proposed. In the argument that ritual's “times out of time” really are outside mundane time, similarities to the operations of digital computers and Herbert Simon's discussion of interaction frequencies in the organization of matter are noted.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72989/1/j.1467-9744.1992.tb00996.x.pd
<i>Psychopathology and Politics</i>. By Harold D. Lasswell, Associate Professor of Political Science in the University of Chicago. (<i>Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press, 1930.</i>)
<i>An Introduction to the Mind in Health and Disease for Students and General Practitioners Interested in Mental Work.</i>By T. Waddelow Smith, F. R. C. S. (Eng.), Deputy Medical Superintendent of the City Mental Hospital, Nottingham; Member of the Medico-Psychological Association (<i>New York: Wm. Wood and Co., 1925.</i>)
<i>Ideal Marriage: Its Physiology and Technique.</i>By Th. H. Van De Velde, M. D. Translated by Stella Browne. Introduction by J. Johnston Abraham, M. D. (<i>London: William Heinemann, Ltd., 1928, 323 pp.</i>)
<i>Old and New Viewpoints in Psychology.</i>By Knight Dunlap, Professor of Experimental Psychology in Johns Hopkins University; Formerly President of the American Psychological Association. (<i>St. Louis: C. V. Mosby Co., 1925.</i>)
<i>Shell Shock and Its Aftermath.</i>By Norman Fenton, Ph. D., Associate Professor of Psychology, Ohio University. Introduction by Thomas W. Salmon, M. D., Professor of Psychiatry, Columbia University. (<i>St. Louis: The C. V. Mosby Company, 1926.</i>)
BRAIN AND PERSONALITY: STUDIES IN THE PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF CELEBRAL NEUROPATHOLOGY AND THE NEUROPSYCHIATRIC ASPECTS OF THE MOTILITY OF SCHIZOPHRENICS. By<i>Paul Schilder, M. D., Ph. D.</i>Nervous and Mental Disease Monograph Series No. 53. (New York and Washington, D. C.: N. M. Dis. Pub. Co., 1931.)
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