At the time Tsung-mi composed his treatises on the typology of Ch'an Buddhism, he described the doctrine of the Ox-head school as follows: The sect has taught the absolute negation without anything to rely on. This is to say that everything, both profane and sacred are dreamlike illusion...
Sin refers to the right member of the semantic oppositions sacred – profane, pure – impure, heaven – earth, male – female, soul – body, etc., and receives a general negative evaluation. The subject of sin is treated in different folklore genres. The most serious sins are considered ...
Primarily, religion is considered an organized belief system that provides a connection with the divine and clearly distinguishes what is sacred from the profane.Definition of Religion The concept of religion is interpreted in many ways, as is the definition. Religion has multiple formal definitions ...
The present treatise, written from an eclectic systematic point of view, stays close to experimental findings and the immediate theories arising therefrom... RS Woodworth,H Schlosberg - 《Encyclopedia of Sciences & Religions》 被引量: 9发表: 1940年 Sacred and Profane Beauty: The Holy in Art Jo...
What is the difference between a part and a whole? What is the basic distinction between the sacred and the profane that underlies all religious beliefs? What is the difference between ethics of care and ethics of justice? What is the difference between civil rights and civil liberties? ...
The Sacred and the Profane in Consumer Behavior: Theodicy on the Odyssey Journal of Consumer Research, 16 Wynne Chin (1998) The partial least squares approach for structural equation modeling. D. Hunt, Stephanie Geiger‐Oneto, P. Varca (2012) Satisfaction in the context of customer co‐...
Belk, R. W., Wallendorf, M., & Sherry, J. F., Jr. (1989). The sacred and the profane in consumer behavior: theodicy on the odyssey.Journal of Consumer Research, 16(1), 1–38. ArticleGoogle Scholar Bendapudi, N., & Leone, R. P. (2003). Psychological implications of customer ...
נורית סטדלרStadler, N. (2001). The Sacred and the Profane in the Concept of Work: The Case of the Ultra- Orthodox Community in Israel. Unpublished doctoral dissertation. The Hebrew Univer- sity of Jerusalem (Hebrew)....