The question of religious content in the media has occupied many scholars studying the relationship between media and religion. However, the study of recent religious thought offers a promising perspective for the analysis of the cultural perceptions of various media technologies. After the Internet spread in the middle of the 1990s, a variety of religious or spiritual interpretations of the new medium emerged. The far- reaching ideas see the Internet as the first step of the realisation of a divine entity consisting of the collective human mind. In this vision, the emergence of the Internet is considered to be part of a teleological evolutionary model. Essential for the religious and evolutionary construction of the Internet is an ...
The Internet, in an unparalleled manner, has created a completely new window on the world. Of late...
Cyberspace and eschatological expectations: how do technosciences contribute to the belief in a spir...
Is internet really a new "electronic temple" where both traditional and New Religious Movements (NRM...
Religious groups have conceived the internet as both a promising way of increasing interest in relig...
This article examines the presence of cyberreligion, the worldwide increasing use of the internet fo...
textabstractIn the last few decades the Internet has developed into an indispensable medium in the d...
Almost all US based religious groups have a presence on the Internet, regardless of the number of pe...
A strong demand to rejuvenate the package of religion becomes inevitable consequence of current glob...
What can the intersection of information technology and religious creativity in contemporary culture...
This paper deals with the developments of online religiosity and its possible perversion. The first ...
As access to the internet continues to grow, so do concerns about its effects on individua...
Heidi Campbell deals with an important aspect of ”lived religion” and the Internet. In her contribut...
This paper tries to study the complex relationship between religion, popular culture and the interne...
The use of the Internet by religious people and groups began in the 1980s. Since that time, the way ...
Gernot Meier deals with some methodological problems in his article. Focusing on the FIGU Community ...
The Internet, in an unparalleled manner, has created a completely new window on the world. Of late...
Cyberspace and eschatological expectations: how do technosciences contribute to the belief in a spir...
Is internet really a new "electronic temple" where both traditional and New Religious Movements (NRM...
Religious groups have conceived the internet as both a promising way of increasing interest in relig...
This article examines the presence of cyberreligion, the worldwide increasing use of the internet fo...
textabstractIn the last few decades the Internet has developed into an indispensable medium in the d...
Almost all US based religious groups have a presence on the Internet, regardless of the number of pe...
A strong demand to rejuvenate the package of religion becomes inevitable consequence of current glob...
What can the intersection of information technology and religious creativity in contemporary culture...
This paper deals with the developments of online religiosity and its possible perversion. The first ...
As access to the internet continues to grow, so do concerns about its effects on individua...
Heidi Campbell deals with an important aspect of ”lived religion” and the Internet. In her contribut...
This paper tries to study the complex relationship between religion, popular culture and the interne...
The use of the Internet by religious people and groups began in the 1980s. Since that time, the way ...
Gernot Meier deals with some methodological problems in his article. Focusing on the FIGU Community ...
The Internet, in an unparalleled manner, has created a completely new window on the world. Of late...
Cyberspace and eschatological expectations: how do technosciences contribute to the belief in a spir...
Is internet really a new "electronic temple" where both traditional and New Religious Movements (NRM...