Ralph L. Piedmont, David O. Moberg's Research in the Social Scientific Study of Religion: Volume PDF

By Ralph L. Piedmont, David O. Moberg

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Additional info for Research in the Social Scientific Study of Religion: Volume 15 (2004)

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1995). The prevalence of posttraumatic stress disorder in a special hospital population of legal psychopaths. Psychology, Crime & Law, 2, 131–141. Kulka, R. , Schlenger, W. , Fairbank, J. , Hough, R. , Jordan, B. , Marmar, C. , et al. (1990). Trauma and the Vietnam war generation: Report on the findings from the National Vietnam Veterans Readjustment Study. New York: Brunner/ Mazel. Laufer, R. , Gallops, M. , & Frey-Wouters, E. (1984). War stress and trauma: The Vietnam veteran experience. Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 25, 65–85.

Is caused when . . ’ This combat high is like getting an injection of morphine—you float around, laughing, joking, having a great time, totally oblivious to the dangers around you. . Problems arise when you begin to want another fix of combat, and another, and another, and, before you know it, you’re hooked. As with heroin or cocaine addiction, combat addiction will surely get you killed. And like any addict, you get desperate and will do anything to get your fix. (pp. 234–237) Several have reported psychiatric interviews showing this rush, this sense of thrill, a high as with cocaine, in veterans suffering from PTSD (Solursh, 1988, 1989; Nadelson, 1992; Wikler, 1980).

The distinction becomes blurred when we go to killing as trauma 27 sleep. It is common in a dream state of mind for images to mingle self and not-self together. When an act of killing takes place, the difference between the self which is doing it and the not-self which is killed is quite clear. It may be more blurred in a dreaming state of mind. This is not the kind of mature self-transcendence that is seen as positive in many religious traditions, but a form of losing self in a more negative way.

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