3 resultados para Religious life--Islam

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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The earliest scholars were not concerned about preparing extensive investigations linking the Persian-period building remains excavated in the entire Levant together. Moreover, the research interests of scholars caused some impediments to the study of this period viz in the last decades; the Achaemenid period has been neglected by the scholars who -in turn- focused on the earlier and later periods for religious reasons. Too, while some regions have been studied abundantly, but it was not the case in other areas, which makes our knowledge is incomplete. From the explanation side, some scholars try to interpret the architectural remains from an ethnic perspective or unsubstantiated personal fancies, so their arguments were utterly lacking any objectivity. This thesis explores what are the Persian architectural and ornamental impacts on the Levantine architecture and the relations between Persian-period sites in Syria-Palestine region. Too, the architectural remains and their contents benefited us to clarify the settlement patterns in the regions being discussed. The author analyzed the ground plans of the buildings and their architectural features and ornamental motifs by conducting a descriptive, analytical, and interpretative study. He also conducted comparisons with similar buildings outside the Levant, especially in Fars to obtain a more comprehensive and systematic study, and then extracting any direct or indirect Persian influences. This has given us a better understanding of the nature of the social, political, and religious life in the entire Levant and the knowledge gap has been bridged to a satisfying extent. This study has demonstrated a few of the Achaemenid impacts, especially on the northern coastline of the Levant.

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La tesi è incentrata sul rapporto tra una comunità religiosa maschile, la Congregazione dell'Oratorio di Roma dei secoli XVI e XVII, e il concetto di cura, mettendo in dialogo storia sociale, storia religiosa e storia della medicina. La prima parte indaga il coinvolgimento degli Oratoriani nella rete caritativa urbana, sottolineando il loro contributo nello sviluppo e nell'amministrazione di una serie di ospedali, ma anche il loro impegno pratico nella cura spirituale e corporale dei malati. La seconda parte prende in esame i professionisti sanitari che frequentavano l'Oratorio, inquadrando il loro rapporto con i padri nel quadro di una più ampia rete di connessioni sociali e politiche nella Roma pontificia. Inoltre, mettendo in rilievo le specificità di speziali, barbieri-chirurghi e medici, l'indagine considera il loro coinvolgimento nella vita religiosa della comunità e la messa a frutto del loro sapere, in ambito umanistico e anatomico. La terza parte studia il complesso rapporto dei sacerdoti con il proprio corpo e con la salute. Viene rilevato il peso delle condizioni sanitarie nell’accettazione di nuovi membri, i legami tra estetica, identità sociale e medicina, ma si prendono in considerazione anche l’ambigua funzione del cibo – inteso come strumento di ascesi che di cura – e il funzionamento concreto dell'organizzazione medica della comunità. Inoltre, un capitolo analizza la circolazione del sapere medico, evidenziando il ruolo della biblioteca, la raccolta e lo scambio di ricette mediche e l'importanza della spezieria comunitaria, mentre un altro capitolo si focalizza sui viaggi terapeutici e sulla pratica del termalismo. L'ultima parte è incentrata sulla peste romana del 1656-57, analizzando il modo in cui la Congregazione affrontò lo scoppio e lo sviluppo dell'epidemia, sia in casa che in città, per sottolineare il fragile e ambiguo equilibrio che definirono tra carità e tutela della salute.

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The thesis describes three studies concerning the role of the Economic Preference set investigated in the Global Preference Survey (GPS) in the following cases: 1) the needs of women with breast cancer; 2) pain undertreament in oncology; 3) legal status of euthanasia and assisted suicide. The analyses, based on regression techniques, were always conducted on the basis of aggregate data and revealed in all cases a possible role of the Economic Preferences studied, also resisting the concomitant effect of the other covariates that were considered from time to time. Regarding individual studies, the related conclusion are: 1) Economic Preferences appear to play a role in influencing the needs of women with breast cancer, albeit of non-trivial interpretation, statistically "resisting" the concomitant effect of the other independent variables considered. However, these results should be considered preliminary and need further confirmation, possibly with prospective studies conducted at the level of the individual; 2) the results show a good degree of internal consistency with regard to pro-social GPS scores, since they are all found to be non-statistically significant and united, albeit only weakly in trend, by a negative correlation with the % of pain undertreated patients. Sharper, at least statistically, is the role of Patience and Willingness to Take Risk, although of more complex empirical interpretation. 3) the results seem to indicate an obvious role of Economic Preferences, however difficult to interpret empirically. Less evidence, at least on the inferential level, emerged, however, regarding variables that, based on common sense, should play an even more obvious role than Economic Preferences in orienting attitudes toward euthanasia and assisted suicide, namely Healthcare System, Legal Origin, and Kinship Tightness; striking, in particular, is the inability to prove a role for the dominant religious orientation even with a simple bivariate analysis.