Monday, February 4, 2019
New and Improved? : The processes of globalisation on spiritual practic
 New and Improved?  The processes of globalisation on  spectral practices illustrated by the global spread of Reiki.The processes of globalisation create an open  foodstuff place for trade, but globalisation is also an exchange of cultures, of ideas and practices. Spiritual practices and rituals  ar one of the ways in which a culture reproduces itself and as such, is  field of honor to hegemonic forces which act to alter the existing form. It has been said that Globalisation may be regarded as a threat to regionalized spiritual practices because there is a lean to standardise them in an Americanised form, which is primarily Christian. One of the  beneath explored aspects of the Internet is the  cultural effects created by the exchange of spiritual ideas and practices online. As more  lot gain access to the World Wide Web, the diversity of spiritual  randomness available increases exponentially. Exotic cultural practices, once only available to the  let few who could afford to travel    to exotic locations, is now available to millions of  good deal across the globe, at the touch of a button. Gone are the  years when spiritual practices are linked to a specific geographical area, with religions linked intimately to the histories and cultures of respective nations and ethnic groups. Spiritual rituals are undergoing a deterritorialisation, assisted by  late media. It has been suggested that the activities of individual religious groups will be  progressively characteristic of free competition on a global scale.  theology has always been a globalising phenomenon, with missionaries and pilgrims travelling to spread their version of the Word to the unenlightened.  consort to Peter Beyer, In the context of globalisation, all religions are increasingly under pressure to see themselves as universal in principle, whether historically they  rescue or not. Religions that have travelled across the globe have been spread,  end-to-end history, by a network of the Faithful leavin   g their home community, forming new communities as they travel, preaching and teaching their messages and rituals to their converts. Now these networks may be  build and maintained electronically. As the printing press made the bible and religious texts available to the masses rather than just the clergy, so the Internet has  accustomed people the means to access spiritual information from other cultures and regions...  ...pick=67 accessed 10/1/05BEY, Hakim, The Information War, http//www.ctheory.net/text_file.asp?pick=64 accessed 10/1/05http//www.ctheory.net/text_file.asp?pick=82 accessed 10/1/05http//www.gseis.ucla.edu/ aptitude/kellner/essays/globalizationtechnopolitics.pdf accessed 10/1/05http//www.mbay.net/jmejia/book063.htm accessed 10/1/05http//www.reikihealingpower.com/learn_reiki.htm accessed 10/1/05INOUE, Nobutaka, 1997, 2001 The Information Age and the  globalisation of Religion, http//www2.kokugakuin.ac.jp/ijcc/wp/global/06inoue2.html accessed 10/1/05MILUTIS, Joe, Making    the World Safe for  snappy Philosophy http//www.ctheory.net/text_file.asp?pick=390 accessed 10/1/05ROBERTSON, Roland, Comments on the "Global  trine" and "Glocalization" http//www2.kokugakuin.ac.jp/ijcc/wp/global/15robertson.html accessed 9/1/05SHIELDS, Rob, The Virtual, London and New York Routledge, 2003, Reviewed by KELLNER, D., and Thomas, A. http//www.gseis.ucla.edu/faculty/kellner/essays/reviewthevirtual.pdf accessed 23/12/04THIEME, Richard, Entering Sacred Digital Space  pursuance to Distinguish the Dreamer and the Dream, http//www.thiemeworks.com/ accessed 23/12/04                  
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