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  1. Abstinence: Abstinence is a self-enforced restraint from indulging in bodily activities that are widely experienced as giving pleasure. Most frequently, the term refers to sexual abstinence, but it can also mean abstinence from alcohol, drugs, food, etc. (Philosophy) [100%] 2023-10-12 [Asceticism]
  2. Abstinence: Refraining from enjoyments which are lawful in themselves. can be considered a virtue only when it serves the purpose of consecrating a life to a higher purpose. The saints, or adherents of religious and philosophical systems that teach the mortification ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [100%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  3. Abstinence (psychoanalysis): Abstinence or the rule of abstinence is the principle of analytic reticence and/or frustration within a clinical situation. It is a central feature of psychoanalytic theory – relating especially to the handling of the transference in analysis. (Medicine) [100%] 2024-01-05 [Clinical psychology]
  4. Abstinence: ABSTINENCE abs'-ti-nens: Abstinence as a form of asceticism reaches back into remote antiquity, and is found among most ancient peoples. It may be defined as a self-discipline which consists in the habitual renunciation, in whole or in ... [100%] 1915-01-01
  5. Abstinence: The word abstinence means refraining from indulging in an appetite. In the 1800s and early 1900s, "abstinence" meant avoiding alcohol. [100%] 2023-03-23 [Contraception]
  6. Abstinence: Abstinence is the practice of refraining (voluntarily or involuntarily) from having sexual relations with other people. In stricter cases, abstinence also refers to not even masturbating. [100%] 2024-03-22 [Abstinence] [Purity culture]...
  7. Abstinencia: La abstinencia (en hebreo anneh, hissamor; en griego ἐγκράτεια; en latín abstinentia, a la persona, abstemius, del prefijo "ab", ‘lejos de’, y "temum", ‘vino’) es una renuncia voluntaria de complacer un deseo o un apetito de ciertas actividades corporales que se ... [80%] 2024-01-05
  8. Abstinentes: El encratismo es una herejía cristiana surgida a mitad del s. II, aunque sus orígenes pueden remontarse a los tiempos apostólicos. Su existencia se prolongó hasta fines del s. [80%] 2023-05-17
  9. Religion (virtue): Religion (when discussed as a virtue) is a distinct moral virtue whose purpose is to render God the worship due to Him as the source of all being and the giver of all good things. As such it is part ... (Virtue) [73%] 2023-11-27 [Justice]
  10. Religion: A rich religious life marks the Great Plains throughout its history. Long before many Native Americans-the Sioux, Blackfoot, Comanches, Apaches, Cheyennes, and Arapahos -moved into the Plains, other Indigenous societies flourished along the rivers and streams of the region ... (Geography) [73%] 2004-01-01 [North America] [Great Plains]...
  11. Religion: RELIGION re-lij'-un: "Religion" and "religious" in Elizabethan English were used frequently to denote the outward expression of worship. This is the force of threskeia, translated "religion" in Acts 26:5; James 1:26,27 (with adjective threskos, "religious ... [73%] 1915-01-01
  12. Religion: Church in Hettinger, North Dakota, 1942 View larger #### * Religion * Adventism * Assemblies of God * Baptists * Black Elk, Nicholas * Bland, Salem * Branch Dividians * Buddhism * Canadian Wesleyan Methodism * Catholic Sisterhoods * Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints * Comfort, E. See Asian Americans ... (Geography) [73%] 2004-01-01 [North America] [Great Plains]...
  13. Religion: The term religion (from Latin: religio meaning "bind, connect") denotes a set of common beliefs and practices pertaining to the supernatural (and its relationship to humanity and the cosmos), which are often codified into prayer, ritual, scriptures, and religious law ... [73%] 2023-02-03
  14. Religion: Religion may be defined as a cultural system of designated behaviors and practices, worldviews, texts, sanctified places, prophecies, ethics, or organizations, that relates humanity to supernatural, transcendental, or spiritual elements. However, there is no scholarly consensus over what precisely constitutes ... [73%] 2021-12-22 [Spirituality]
  15. Religion: Religion is a range of social-cultural systems, including designated behaviors and practices, morals, beliefs, worldviews, texts, sanctified places, prophecies, ethics, or organizations, that generally relate humanity to supernatural, transcendental, and spiritual elements—although there is no scholarly consensus over ... (Social-cultural system) [73%] 2024-01-13 [Religion] [Culture]...
  16. Religion: The term religion (from Latin: religio meaning "bind, connect") denotes a set of common beliefs and practices pertaining to the supernatural (and its relationship to humanity and the cosmos), which are often codified into prayer, ritual, scriptures, and religious law ... [73%] 2023-02-04
  17. Religion: "Religion" refers to a set of core beliefs upon which people base their lives, usually involving a deep personal commitment, dedication, devotion, even variant degrees of worship, emotionally and mentally, of something or someone, which may or may not be ... [73%] 2023-02-17 [Religion]
  18. Religion: The origin of the Latin word religio or relligio has been the subject of discussion since the time of Cicero. Two alternative derivations have been given, viz. from relegere, to rather together, and religare, to bind back, fasten. [73%] 2022-09-02
  19. Religion: The term religion (from Latin: religio meaning "bind, connect") denotes a set of common beliefs and practices pertaining to the supernatural (and its relationship to humanity and the cosmos), which are often codified into prayer, ritual, scriptures, and religious law ... [73%] 2023-02-04
  20. Religion: On one definition, a religion is an apparently universal social phenomenon involving some or all of the following: Some religions are implicit, and consist of inherited ancestral traditions (a "way of life"). Others are organized, and promote themselves in conscious ... [73%] 2023-07-03

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