What's the difference between shamanist and shamanistic?
Shamanist
Definition:
(n.) An adherent of Shamanism.
Example Sentences:
(1) The functions and successes of shamanistic healers are addressed in the context of psychoneuroimmunology, which allows a description of how therapeutic success is achieved via the symbolic manipulation of biological processes.
(2) The abundant data indicate that the shamanistic priest, who was highly placed in the stratified society, guided the souls of the living and dead, provided for the transmutation of souls into other bodies and the personification of plants as possessed by human spirits, as well as performing other shamanistic activities.
(3) These different types of trance healers are characterized and compared in order to illustrate the importance of terminological clarity, as well as to examine the characteristics and functions of shamanistic healers with respect to the social and cultural context of their activities.
(4) In the course of the ceremony it travels on a shamanistic journey to the upperworld to seek the blessings of health and well-being.
(5) In comparing shamanistic healing with Western psychotherapy, the principal distinctions advanced by psychiatrists and psychologists have been: (1) that the shaman's patients receive 'remission without insight' while Western psychotherapy provides patients with a learning experience; and (2) that Western psychotherapy is based upon rational theory, whereas psychotherapeutic elements in shamanistic rituals are by-products of irrational magical activity.
(6) An investigation of the Malay shamanistic ritual (Main Peteri) expands the scope of discussion, since it reveals that embedded within this exorcistic spirit-raising seance is a nonprojective indigenous theory of psychic functioning, employing symbols internal to the patient, which is comparable to, and no more nor less rational than, mainstream Western theories.
(7) However, Park denied some of the more lurid rumours surrounding the scandal - including reports that she had fallen into a religious cult and conducted shamanist rituals in the presidential Blue House.
(8) Although there is a need to assess the positive and negative effects of shamanistic practices on Miyako Islands' health care system as a whole, this report indicates the urgent need to come to terms with the interaction between shamanism and psychiatry on a multidimensional level.
(9) There is a whole routine on this shamanistic healing experience in Numb, where he probes why sex, drugs, food, drink and religion are used to squash feelings rather than deal with them.
(10) Based on an extensive review of these two powerful narcotic (i.e., hypnotic) plants in iconography and ritual, it is argued that the dynastic Egyptians had developed a form of shamanistic trance induced by these two plants and used it in medicine as well as healing rituals.
(11) There's also some precursors to my magical thinking; we're talking about fashion as an almost shamanistic activity, so I was very surprised to find that I'd been thinking about all these things back then."
(12) Western cultural avoidance of ASC has inhibited understanding of these phenomena, and has prevented an integration of shamanistic and trance perspectives into the understanding human of psychology, consciousness, and knowledge of the world.
(13) There are so many options here for all levels and abilities Saija leads us to a new metal walkway over Lake Somerjävi to view the 4,000-year-old Värikallio rock paintings, one of the major attractions of Hossa’s shamanistic history.
(14) Contemporary reference to the role of water lilies and mandrakes (Nymphaea and Mandragora, respectively) in ancient Egyptian healing, and subsequent research on the iconography of the water lily in Mayan shamanistic ritual, suggest the possible importance of these plants as adjuncts to shamanistic healing in dynastic Egypt.
(15) "It was all loaded with meaning and signifiers and shamanistic moves and God knows what.
(16) Through this process it was possible to obtain further personal information, in particular concerning the patient's grandmother, who was a shamanistic mudang.
(17) The author hypothesizes that the underreporting of mental illness in Tutuila, American Samoa, is a direct result of the social system, which provides a means of "curing" emotional disorder by family group process and shamanistic ritual, by making the disorder less disruptive, and by absolving the affected individual of personal guilt.
(18) There have been claims that I fell for a religious cult or had (shamanist rituals) performed in the Blue House, but I would like to clarify that those are absolutely not true,” Park said in her address.
(19) This criterion and others establish a basis for differentiating between the terms "shamanic," "shamanistic," and "mediumistic."
(20) These perspectives reinforce the continued importance of traditional shamanistic healers in the contemporary world.