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Faith in Development - (Biup General) by Heinz Streib & Ralph W Hood Jr (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- How has faith developed in the US and German societies across the last decades?
- About the Author: Heinz Streib is a senior professor at Universität Bielefeld, Germany, and conducts research in the psychology of religion.
- 394 Pages
- Religion + Beliefs, General
- Series Name: Biup General
Description
About the Book
This book presents the changes of worldview and meaning-making that people associate with their religious, spiritual, agnostic and atheist identifications.Book Synopsis
How has faith developed in the US and German societies across the last decades? In a three-wave longitudinal investigation of faith development, this study presents the changes of worldview and meaning-making that people associate with their religious, spiritual, agnostic and atheist identifications. For almost two decades, research teams in Chattanooga (USA) and Bielefeld (Germany) have invited and re-invited hundreds of people to participate in a personal interview and to answer an extensive questionnaire in order to better understand the reasons and the consequences of their continuity or discontinuity in religious, spiritual, or non-theistic faith.About the Author
Heinz Streib is a senior professor at Universität Bielefeld, Germany, and conducts research in the psychology of religion. He established and directs the Research Center for Biographical Studies in Contemporary Religion. He is editor-in-chief of the International Journal for the Psychology of Religion. His research focuses on biographical-reconstructive and psychometric assessment of religious change and development over the lifespan, deconversion, fundamentalism, xenophobia and the semantics of spirituality.
Ralph W. Hood Jr. is a professor of psychology, LeRoy A. Martin Distinguished Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, and UT Alumni Association Distinguished Professor. He is a past president of the Division 36 of the American Psychological Association and a recipient of its William James award for research in the psychology of religion.