Synthesis:Source Traditions: Difference between revisions
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*## Christianity | *## Christianity | ||
*### Nicene Christianity | *### Nicene Christianity | ||
*#### Catholicism — Catholicism has as one of its features a remarkable capacity for local syncretism, very often adopting, enfolding, informing, etc. local religions, saints, spirits, traditions, rituals, particularly in Central and South America and Africa, but in other places also, giving many of these very different flavors and thus likely relationships to emergent phenomena, etc. | *#### [[Catholicism]] — Catholicism has as one of its features a remarkable capacity for local syncretism, very often adopting, enfolding, informing, etc. local religions, saints, spirits, traditions, rituals, particularly in Central and South America and Africa, but in other places also, giving many of these very different flavors and thus likely relationships to emergent phenomena, etc. | ||
*##### Latin Church | *##### Latin Church | ||
*###### Jesuits | *###### Jesuits | ||
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*## Manichaeism | *## Manichaeism | ||
*## Martial Arts | *## Martial Arts | ||
*## Neoplatonism | *## [[Neoplatonism]] | ||
*## New Religious Movements | *## New Religious Movements | ||
*### Ásatrú/Heathenry | *### Ásatrú/Heathenry | ||
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*### Illuminism | *### Illuminism | ||
*### Kabbalah | *### Kabbalah | ||
*### Rosicrucianism | *### Rosicrucianism | ||
*### Tenrikyo | *### Tenrikyo | ||
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*## Yazidism | *## Yazidism | ||
*## Zoroastrianism | *## Zoroastrianism | ||
== References == | |||
[[Category:Traditions]] |
Latest revision as of 12:28, 15 April 2025
A vast number of religious, spiritual, ritual, cultural, philosophical, and other traditions have contributed to the conversation regarding Emergent Phenomena for at least thousands and likely many tens of thousands of years and many continue to today.
Further, critical to integrating Emergent Phenomena into mainstream clinical understandings and practice are the opportunities provided by manuals such as the DSM-5TR and related manuals, with statements providing an immediate functional need for detailed understandings of the world's traditions and what they consider normal, such as this statement, from the DSM-5TR, on page 102, in the section on Hallucinations:
"Hallucinations are perception-like experiences that occur without an external stimulus. They are vivid and clear, with the full force and impact of normal perceptions, and not under voluntary control. They may occur in any sensory modality, but auditory hallucinations are the most common in schizophrenia and related disorders. Auditory hallucinations are usually experienced as voices, whether familiar or unfamiliar, that are perceived as distinct from the individual's own thoughts. The hallucinations must occur in the context of a clear sensorium; those that occur while falling asleep (hypnagogic) or waking up (hypnopompic) are considered to be within the range of normal experience. Hallucinations may be a normal part of religious experience in certain cultural contexts.”
Thus, in order to provide extensive support for diagnosticians, care providers, family members, friends, and everyone else relating to these issues, EmergeWiki aims to have detailed information and additional links to external sources on the major and minor "cultural context" mentioned above, including, but not limited to the following, and we encourage authors to add more to this list as needed to be as complete and thorough as possible:
- Abrahamic religions
- Christianity
- Nicene Christianity
- Catholicism — Catholicism has as one of its features a remarkable capacity for local syncretism, very often adopting, enfolding, informing, etc. local religions, saints, spirits, traditions, rituals, particularly in Central and South America and Africa, but in other places also, giving many of these very different flavors and thus likely relationships to emergent phenomena, etc.
- Latin Church
- Jesuits
- Carmelites
- Franciscans
- Dominicans
- Cistercians
- Beguines and Beghards
- Eastern Catholic Church
- Latin Church
- Catholicism — Catholicism has as one of its features a remarkable capacity for local syncretism, very often adopting, enfolding, informing, etc. local religions, saints, spirits, traditions, rituals, particularly in Central and South America and Africa, but in other places also, giving many of these very different flavors and thus likely relationships to emergent phenomena, etc.
- Protestantism
- Pentecostalism
- Anglicanism
- Baptist churches
- Nondenominational Christianity
- Lutheranism
- Methodism
- Reformed churches (Calvinism)
- African initiated churches
- Chinese Patriotic Christian Churches
- Eastern Protestant Christianity
- Adventism
- New Apostolic Church
- Restorationism
- Anabaptism
- Local churches
- Plymouth Brethren
- Hussites
- Quakers
- Messianic Judaism
- Orthodox Christianity
- Eastern Orthodoxy
- Greek Orthodox Pratriarchates or Churches
- Constantinople
- Alexandria
- Antioch
- Jerusalem
- Russia
- Serbia
- Romania
- Bulgaria
- Georgia
- Cyprus
- Greece
- Poland
- Albania
- Czech Lands and Slovakia
- North Macedonia
- Greek Orthodox Pratriarchates or Churches
- Oriental Orthodox Churches
- Coptic Orthodox
- Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo
- Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo
- Syriac Orthodox
- Armenian Apostolic
- Malankara Orthodox Syrian
- Western Orthodoxy
- Evangelical Christianity
- Restorationist
- Mormon/Latter-day Saint movement
- Jehovah's Witnesses
- Eastern Orthodoxy
- Nicene Christianity
- Islam
- Sunnīsm
- Ḥanafī Sunnīsm
- Shāfiʿī Sunnīsm
- Mālikī Sunnīsm
- Ḥanbalī Sunnīsm
- Shī‘ism
- Twelver Shīʿīsm
- Zaydī Shīʿīsm
- Ismāʿīlī Shīʿīsm
- Ghulat
- Kharījism
- Sufīsm
- Ahmadiyya movement
- Salafism
- Wahhabism
- Sunnīsm
- Judaism
- Hassidism
- Kabbalah
- Ultraorthodox
- Christianity
- Hinduism — Hinduism, far from being a single, coherent religion, probably has more local gods, variants, diversity of view, etc. than any other tradition on this list.
- Advaita Vedānta
- Arya Samaj
- ISKCON (Hare Krishna)
- Sant Mat traditions
- Shaivism
- Shaktism
- Shrauta or "vedic" hinduism
- Smartism
- Vaishnavism
- Yogic Schools
- Bhakti yoga
- Hatha yoga
- Jñana yoga
- Karma yoga
- Kundalini Yoga
- Raja yoga
- Buddhism — According to the Pew Research Center, "all 10 countries with the largest Buddhist populations are in the Asia-Pacific region, and these countries collectively are home to the lion’s share (95%) of all Buddhists. Half (50%) of the world’s Buddhists live in one country, China. The largest Buddhist populations outside China are in Thailand (13%), Japan (9%), Burma (Myanmar) (8%), Sri Lanka (3%), Vietnam (3%), Cambodia (3%), South Korea (2%), India (2%) and Malaysia (1%)."[1]
- Mahāyāna Buddhism
- Madhyamaka
- Yogacāra
- Pure Land
- Zen
- Soto
- Rinzai
- Ch’an
- Vajrayāna Buddhism
- Tantra
- Dzogchen — According to Claire Petitmengin, "Dzogchen or “Great Perfection”, which designates the ultimate natural state of everything, emerged in India and Tibet in the eight to ninth centuries. Main Indian Dzogchen masters were Vajraprake (tib. Garab Dorjé), Manjusrimitra, Vairocana, Padmasambhava and Vimalamitra. In Tibet it was primarily transmitted by the Ancient School (Nyingma), through a lineage that includes illustrious masters as Yeshe Tsogyal, Longchenpa, Jigme Lingpa, Patrul Rinpoche and Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche."[2]
- Mahāmūdra — According to Claire Petitmengin, "Mahāmūdra (where mahā means “great”, and mūdra means “gesture”), often translated as the Great Seal, is a Buddhist meditative tradition that emerged in India around the eighth and ninth centuries. The great Mahāmūdra Indian masters were Saraha, Shabari, Tilopa, Maitripa and Naropa. The Mahāmūdra transmissions entered Tibet between the eleventh and twelfth centuries, from Marpa to Milarepa and Gambopa. Most contemporary Tibetan Mahāmūdra masters rely on the teachings that are found in the works of Dakpo Tashi Namgyal (1513–87) and the ninth Karmapa Wangchouk Dorje (1555–1603)."[2]
- Shingon
- Theravāda Buddhism: this itself has huge internal diversity
- Regional traditions
- Contemporary Western Buddhism
- Japanese New Religious Movements (Soka Gakkai)
- Korean Buddhism
- Nichiren Buddhism
- Thai Forest Tradition
- Tibetan Buddhism
- Vietnamese Buddhism
- Mahāyāna Buddhism
- Folk Traditions — According to the Pew Research Center, "An estimated 405 million people – or about 6% of the world’s total population – are adherents of folk or traditional religions. These are faiths that are closely associated with a particular group of people, ethnicity or tribe. They often have no formal creeds or sacred texts."[1]
- African traditional religions
- African Diasporic religions (Vodou, Candomblé, Umbanda)
- Australian Aboriginal religions
- Baltic paganism
- Chinese folk religions
- Native American religions
- Nordic pre-Christian traditions
- Pacific Islander religions
- Slavic paganism
- Vietnamese folk religion (Đạo Mẫu)
- Other Traditions
- Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophical Schools
- Ancient Egypt
- Confucianism
- Druze faith
- Falun Gong
- Gnosticism
- Hermetism
- Jainism
- Magical or occult practices
- Mandaeism
- Manichaeism
- Martial Arts
- Neoplatonism
- New Religious Movements
- Ásatrú/Heathenry
- Baha'i Faith
- Cao Dai
- Discordianism
- Druidry
- IOT/Chaos
- Japanese new religious movements (Oomoto, Seicho-no-Ie)
- Kimbanguism
- Neopaganism
- Korean new religious movements (Cheondoism, Jeungsanism)
- New Age spirituality
- OTO
- Raëlism
- Rastafarianism
- Samaritanism
- Santeria
- Scientology
- Tenrikyo
- Thelema
- Vietnamese Hòa Hảo
- Wicca
- Orphism
- Other
- Perennialism
- Shinto
- Shamanism
- Siberian shamanic traditions
- Korean shamanism (Muism)
- Sikhism
- Spiritism
- Western Esotericism
- Alchemy
- Astrology
- Freemasonry
- Gnosticism
- Hermeticism
- Illuminism
- Kabbalah
- Rosicrucianism
- Tenrikyo
- Theosophy
- Taoism
- Transcendental meditation
- Western Mindfulness Movement
- Yazidism
- Zoroastrianism
- Abrahamic religions
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Hackett, C., Grim, B. J., & et al. (2012). The Global Religious Landscape. A Report on the Size and Distribution of the World’s Major Religious Groups as of 2010. Pew Research Center. https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/2012/12/18/global-religious-landscape-exec/
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Petitmengin, C. (2021). On the Veiling and Unveiling of Experience: A Comparison Between the Micro-Phenomenological Method and the Practice of Meditation. Journal of Phenomenological Psychology, 52(1), 36–77. https://doi.org/10.1163/15691624-12341383