Supplemental Material for Associations Between Coherent Neural Activity in the Brain’s Value System During Antismoking Messages and Reductions in Smoking

2018 ◽  
Keyword(s):  
2018 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 375-384 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicole Cooper ◽  
Steven Tompson ◽  
Matthew B. O'Donnell ◽  
Jean M. Vettel ◽  
Danielle S. Bassett ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samantha M. Mowrer ◽  
Andrew A. Jahn ◽  
William A. Cunningham

2004 ◽  
pp. 21-29
Author(s):  
G.V. Pyrog

In domestic scientific and public opinion, interest in religion as a new worldview paradigm is very high. Today's attention to the Christian religion in our society is connected, in our opinion, with the specificity of its value system, which distinguishes it from other forms of consciousness: the idea of ​​God, the absolute, the eternity of moral norms. That is why its historical forms do not receive accurate characteristics and do not matter in the mass consciousness. Modern religious beliefs do not always arise as a result of the direct influence of church preaching. The emerging religious values ​​are absorbed in a wide range of philosophical, artistic, ethical ideas, acting as a compensation for what is generally defined as spirituality. At the same time, the appeal to Christian values ​​became very popular.


Author(s):  
Alistair Fox

This chapter analyses the earliest of the New Zealand coming-of-age feature films, an adaptation of Ian Cross’s novel The God Boy, to demonstrate how it addresses the destructive impact on a child of the puritanical value-system that had dominated Pākehā (white) society through much of the twentieth century, being particularly strong during the interwar years, and the decade immediately following World War II. The discussion explores how dysfunction within the family and repressive religious beliefs eventuate in pressures that cause Jimmy, the protagonist, to act out transgressively, and then to turn inwards to seek refuge in the form of self-containment that makes him a prototype of the Man Alone figure that is ubiquitous in New Zealand fiction.


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