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Soul Searching or Soul Searchin' may refer to: Soul Searching (Average White Band album), 1976; Soul Searching (Shirley Scott album), 1959; Soul Searchin' (Glenn Frey album), 1988 "Soul Searchin'" (Glenn Frey song), the album's title track "Soul Searching", a Ronnie Earl album, 1988 "Soul Searchin'" (Brian Wilson and Andy Paley song), 1990s
Bustin' Loose is a studio album released in 1979 by the Washington, D.C.–based go-go band Chuck Brown & the Soul Searchers. [1] [6] [7] The album includes the charting single and one of the all-time classic go-go songs "Bustin' Loose", [8] along with a remake of the classic Jerry Butler's soul ballad "Never Give You Up" from the 1968 album The Ice Man Cometh.
In the years preceding this publication, Jung had experienced several dramatic shifts. After the Bugishu Psychological Expedition through East Africa with George Beckwith, Helton Godwin Baynes, and Ruth Bailey, Jung returned to Zürich and focused on the lecture format of his English seminars at the Psychological Club - eventually attracting a new group of international followers. [1]
Soul Searchers or The Soul Searchers may also refer to Jake Wade and the Soul Searchers, a funk band from the 1970s; The Soul Searchers, a US soul band with Chuck Brown; The Soul Searchers (Canadian group), a soul group originating in Toronto in the mid 1960s; The Soul Searchers (US West Coast group), a backing group for singer Richard Berry
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Spiritualism is a metaphysical belief that the world is made up of at least two fundamental substances, matter and spirit.This very broad metaphysical distinction is further developed into many and various forms by the inclusion of details about what spiritual entities exist such as a soul, the afterlife, spirits of the dead, deities and mediums; as well as details about the nature of the ...
Man's Search for Meaning is a 1946 book by Viktor Frankl chronicling his experiences as a prisoner in Nazi concentration camps during World War II, and describing his psychotherapeutic method, which involved identifying a purpose to each person's life through one of three ways: the completion of tasks, caring for another person, or finding meaning by facing suffering with dignity.
The Modern English noun soul is derived from Old English sāwol, sāwel.The earliest attestations reported in the Oxford English Dictionary are from the 8th century. In King Alfred's translation of De Consolatione Philosophiae, it is used to refer to the immaterial, spiritual, or thinking aspect of a person, as contrasted with the person's physical body; in the Vespasian Psalter 77.50, it ...