enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. P. D. James - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P._D._James

    Phyllis Dorothy James White, Baroness James of Holland Park (3 August 1920 – 27 November 2014), known professionally as P. D. James, was an English novelist and life peer. Her rise to fame came with her series of detective novels featuring the police commander and poet, Adam Dalgliesh .

  3. Definition of religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Definition_of_religion

    Religion is the substance, the ground, and the depth of man's spiritual life." [37] When religion is seen in terms of sacred, divine, intensive valuing, or ultimate concern, then it is possible to understand why scientific findings and philosophical criticisms (e.g., those made by Richard Dawkins) do not necessarily disturb its adherents. [38]

  4. The Children of Men - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Children_of_Men

    The Children of Men is a dystopian novel by English writer P. D. James, published in 1992.Set in England in 2021, it centres on the results of mass infertility.James describes a United Kingdom that is steadily depopulating and focuses on a small group of resisters who do not share the disillusionment of the masses.

  5. Religio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religio

    The definition of religio by Cicero is cultum deorum, "the proper performance of rites in veneration of the gods." [ 12 ] Julius Caesar used religio to mean "obligation of an oath" when discussing captured soldiers making an oath to their captors

  6. Shroud for a Nightingale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shroud_for_a_Nightingale

    Shroud for a Nightingale is a 1971 detective novel by English writer P. D. James, part of her Adam Dalgliesh series. Chief Superintendent Adam Dalgliesh of Scotland Yard is called in to investigate the death of two student nurses at the hospital nursing school of Nightingale House.

  7. Religious experience - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_experience

    James distinguished between institutional religion and personal religion. Institutional religion refers to the religious group or organization, and plays an important part in a society's culture. Personal religion, in which the individual has mystical experience, can be experienced regardless of the culture.

  8. Religiosity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religiosity

    The Oxford English Dictionary defines religiosity as: "Religiousness; religious feeling or belief. Affected or excessive religiousness". [3] Different scholars have seen this concept as broadly about religious orientations and degrees of involvement or commitment. [4]

  9. Synchromysticism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synchromysticism

    Religious experiences belong to the "personal religion", which he considered to be "more fundamental than either theology or ecclesiasticism". [14] Synchromysticism, as the union of synchronicity and mysticism, is thus the sense of interconnectedness and oneness with reality that comes from a heightened and enhanced awareness of synchronicity. [1]