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Ashabını yıldızlara benzeten sevgili Peygamberimiz'in (sas) çevresinde tatlı mı tatlı, parlak mı parlak birçok minik yıldız vardı. Sevgili Peygamberimiz (sas) o yıldızları sadece sevmekle kalmaz, aynı zamanda onlarla çocuklaşırdı da. Biz de buna şahit olmak ve onların ışığıyla aydınlanmak için yedi minik yıldızın anısına konuk olacağız. O hâlde hazırsan gökyüzüne uçmak için kanatlarını takmayı unutma...
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Bridging the subject fields of psychology and religion, this volume interweaves theories with first-hand accounts, clinical insight, and empirical research to look at such questions as whether religion is a help or a hindrance in times of stress.
This APHA bestseller offers a complete set of community-oriented primary care skills for health professionals who need to access these skills quickly and learn the basics in a brief amount of time. It provides a broad view of experiences and processes faced by health professionals and community leaders in addressing a series of health problems for their defined populations. This book provides a complete set of COPC skills for the health professional who needs to be able to access these skills quickly and learn the basics of COPC in a brief amount of reading time.
Designed for the busy GP, Emergencies in Primary Care covers the range of emergencies GPs might expect to encounter in the primary care setting, from the immediately life-threatening to the smaller but urgent problems that can and do arise. Written in a concise and didactic style, it incorporates useful algorithms to make complex management straightforward. Government guidelines are incorporated along with links to further information sources. Each clinical topic is succinctly addressed with all the information needed to make an accurate diagnosis, other diagnoses to consider and a clear management strategy.
In Hadith terminology, we come across terms such as thiqa (trustworthy), mutqin (convincing), 'adl (just), sadÅ«q (veracious), matrÅ«k (abandoned), da'Ä«f (weak) and so on. Each of these terms is used to denote the level of the reliability of a transmitter (rÄ vÄ«) of Prophetic Traditions. And there is another group of terms such as sahÄ«h (sound), hasan (good) and da'Ä«f (weak). When any of these terms are predicated of a Prophetic Tradition, they indicate the proportion of probability of whether a supposed prophetic tradition actually belongs to the Prophet. Examining prophetic traditions, scholars studying prophetic traditions took into account the consistency of transmitters in general terms and all different chains of transmission of a prophetic tradition. In this book, I propose a model to determine numerical values of classes of transmitters and of properties (hukm) of prophetic traditions. It will also to help us identify the most probable form of any prophetic tradition.
Evaluated are stress causes and its effects, both physical and emotional. Also studied are coping and stress management techniques.
Many therapists and counselors find themselves struggling to connect the research on the psychology of religion and spirituality to their clinical practice. This book will address this issue, providing a valuable resource for clinicians that will help translate basic research findings into useful clinical practice strategies. The editors and chapter authors, all talented and respected scholar-clinicians, offer a practical and functional understanding of the empirical literature on the psychology of religion and spirituality of, while at the same time outlining clinical implications, assessments, and strategies for counseling and psychotherapy. Chapters cover such topics as religious and spiritual identity, its development, and its relationship with one’s personality; client God images; spiritually transcendent experiences; forgiveness and reconciliation; and religion and spirituality in couples and families. Each concludes with clinical application questions and suggestions for further reading. This book is a must-read for all those wishing to ground their clinical work in an empirical understanding of the role that religion and spirituality plays in the lives of their clients.
In this cross-cultural, interdisciplinary study, John Hick draws upon major world religions, as well as biology, psychology, parapsychology, anthropology, and philosophy, to explore the mystery of death. He argues that scientific and philosophical objections to the idea of survival after death can be challenged, and he claims that human inadequacy in facing suffering supports the basic religious argument for immortality.