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  1. The Threefold Nature of Spirituality (TNS) in a Psychological Cognitive Framework.Katarzyna Skrzypińska - 2014 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 36 (3):277-302.
    This article describes a new theoretical, psychological model characterizing the concept, structure and functioning of spirituality in relation to the phenomenon of religiousness. The structural and processual approaches are indispensable when examining the spiritual sphere. The theory suggests that the psychological nature of spirituality can be considered from a threefold perspective: as a cognitive scheme, as a dimension of personality, as an attitude towards life. The Threefold Nature of Spirituality model binds these perspectives together and describes the phenomena and processes (...)
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  • Religion and Subjective Well-Being in Chinese College Students: Does Meaningfulness Matter?Yanfei Hou, Xiangang Feng, Xueling Yang, Zicong Yang, Xiaoyuan Zhang & Harold G. Koenig - 2018 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 40 (1):60-79.
    _ Source: _Volume 40, Issue 1, pp 60 - 79 Studies from the West have reported a positive relationship between religion and mental health, and yet research on the relationship between religiosity and well-being among Chinese is rare. The present study investigated this relationship in a representative sample of Chinese college students. From a total sample of 11139 college students in 16 universities nationwide, 1418 students with self-reported religious beliefs were selected. We assessed religiosity, subjective well-being, psychological distress, and meaning (...)
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  • Religiosity, Spirituality, and God Concepts.Christian Zwingmann & Sonja Gottschling - 2015 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 37 (1):98-116.
    Within a German sample, the current cross-sectional questionnaire study conducts interreligious and interdenominational comparisons between Catholics, Protestants, free-church Protestants, Bahá’ís, Muslims, Spiritualists, i.e., religiously unaffiliated persons who label themselves as “spiritual,” and religious/spiritual “nones.” The comparisons refer to self-ratings of religiosity and spirituality, centrality of religiosity, as assessed by the Centrality of Religiosity Scale, and God concepts. The study is largely exploratory in nature, but also aims at identifying contexts of faith in which the term “spiritual” is typically used as (...)
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  • Finding Meaning in Hell. The Role of Meaning, Religiosity and Spirituality in Posttraumatic Growth During the Coronavirus Crisis in Spain.María Prieto-Ursúa & Rafael Jódar - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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