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Search Results (515)

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9 pages, 253 KB  
Article
On Some Arguments Regarding the Number of Israelites During the Exodus and Their Relevance
by Stanislaw Krajewski
Religions 2026, 17(6), 737; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17060737 (registering DOI) - 19 Jun 2026
Abstract
The traditionally accepted figure of 600,000 men departing Egypt during the Exodus is widely regarded as highly implausible by non-fundamentalist readers of the Torah. Biblical scholars have proposed alternative interpretations, beginning with W. M. Flinders Petrie, who argued in 1906 that the term [...] Read more.
The traditionally accepted figure of 600,000 men departing Egypt during the Exodus is widely regarded as highly implausible by non-fundamentalist readers of the Torah. Biblical scholars have proposed alternative interpretations, beginning with W. M. Flinders Petrie, who argued in 1906 that the term elef, as used in passages enumerating potential soldiers leaving Egypt, should be understood not as “thousand” but rather as “a group.” This paper introduces two relatively underexplored considerations and examines their relevance for contemporary believers. First, a mathematical argument is presented that refines Petrie’s approach, providing further support for the improbability of a literal reading of these figures. Second, an additional calculation—based on the number of midwives mentioned in the Torah, also noted by Petrie—suggests that the population of Israelites may have been closer to 20,000. It should be emphasized that no argument of this kind can definitively establish any thesis regarding these numbers; rather, arguments can only render a given thesis more probable, depending on the assumptions employed to perform the calculations. Finally, the paper addresses the theological relevance of belief in the literal truth of the Exodus narrative. Drawing on the Buberian concept of saga and the approach of such thinkers as Louis Jacobs, it argues that, despite reinterpretations, it remains important for Jewish and other adherents to preserve belief in a kernel of historical truth within the Biblical narratives. At the same time, this residual core of literally true historical facts has been diminishing over time and remains subject to unpredictable further revision. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Modern Jewish Thought and Philosophy)
14 pages, 2237 KB  
Article
Women’s Cooperatives and Silvopastoralism in the Mediterranean: A Strategic Approach to Service Provision in Lebanon and Turkey
by Nazan Koluman, Lamis Chalak, Georgia Koutouzidou, Serap Göncü, Melis Celik Guney, Celine Eid and Athanasios Ragkos
Sustainability 2026, 18(12), 5995; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18125995 - 11 Jun 2026
Viewed by 155
Abstract
Cooperatives play a significant role within organizational models by providing essential services such as technical support, advocacy, information, knowledge, and guidance, which contribute to the production of high-quality animal products in a safe, efficient, and responsible manner. Furthermore, cooperatives aim to enhance the [...] Read more.
Cooperatives play a significant role within organizational models by providing essential services such as technical support, advocacy, information, knowledge, and guidance, which contribute to the production of high-quality animal products in a safe, efficient, and responsible manner. Furthermore, cooperatives aim to enhance the livelihoods of marginalized populations and address consumer needs. In this context, a study focusing on the status of women’s cooperatives in the Eastern Mediterranean offers valuable insights into women’s participation in economic and social life, as well as their challenges and expectations. This research aims to evaluate the status, perspectives, participation, activities, and expectations of women’s cooperatives in Lebanon and Turkey. The findings indicate that 90% of respondents in Lebanon and 45.5% in Turkey expressed satisfaction with their respective cooperatives. Additionally, 90% of Lebanese respondents and 59.1% of Turkish respondents would recommend that women establish their own cooperatives. The most common motivation for forming cooperatives in both countries was the belief that women are stronger when they collaborate. Furthermore, 75% of respondents in Lebanon and 45.4% in Turkey believe that cooperatives are suitable for conducting business, while those who disagreed emphasized the need for specialized traders to address specific business requirements. Respondents who expressed dissatisfaction with cooperative collaboration often mentioned difficulties in making joint decisions and challenges in group cohesion. These findings underline the importance of cooperatives in enhancing women’s roles in economic activities and the challenges they face in both Lebanon and Turkey. Despite these challenges, women’s cooperatives continue to be perceived as a valuable means of empowerment and a key strategy for fostering collaboration and economic growth. Full article
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19 pages, 220 KB  
Article
From Subjectivism and Pure Objectivism to Conditional Objectivism: A Criticism and Revision of Richard Arneson’s Theory of Welfare
by Chenju Xian and Xinggui Mao
Philosophies 2026, 11(3), 95; https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies11030095 - 10 Jun 2026
Viewed by 165
Abstract
Richard J. Arneson’s theory of welfare underwent a significant transformation from subjectivism to objectivism. Three difficulties—adaptive preferences, false beliefs, and non-prudential desires—demonstrate that a welfare theory grounded in subjective attitudes is untenable in principle, driving Arneson toward an objective list theory. Through his [...] Read more.
Richard J. Arneson’s theory of welfare underwent a significant transformation from subjectivism to objectivism. Three difficulties—adaptive preferences, false beliefs, and non-prudential desires—demonstrate that a welfare theory grounded in subjective attitudes is untenable in principle, driving Arneson toward an objective list theory. Through his rejection of the endorsement constraint, he established a purely objectivist position: subjective attitudes are “neither necessary nor sufficient” for well-being. This position generates significant justificatory pressure toward hard paternalism. Arneson confronted this consequence by arguing that hard paternalism is defensible in principle, while contending that paternalistic intervention must remain restrained in practice on grounds of the intrinsic value of autonomy, the limitations of state capacity, and the costs of stigmatization. However, the reasons Arneson offers for restraint cannot be adequately supported by the objective list alone; they face explanatory pressure at the level of political application. Conditional objectivism can better fill this explanatory gap: for an item on the objective list to count as contributing to a particular individual’s well-being, a negative condition must be satisfied—namely, that the individual would not rationally reject the item under conditions of reflective deliberation. Full article
19 pages, 288 KB  
Article
Do Radical Ideas Lead to Support for Radical Actions? Exploring the Connection Between Radical Environmentalist Beliefs, Support for Radical Protest Forms and Perceived Governmental Efficacy
by David Herbert and Fateme Pourhasanzade
Sustainability 2026, 18(11), 5600; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18115600 - 2 Jun 2026
Viewed by 271
Abstract
Radical environmental protests (REPs) have become more frequent and, in some contexts, more supported by the public. Amid ongoing climate change, biodiversity loss, government backsliding on environmental goals, and political polarization, REP is likely to grow, with implications for both social and environmental [...] Read more.
Radical environmental protests (REPs) have become more frequent and, in some contexts, more supported by the public. Amid ongoing climate change, biodiversity loss, government backsliding on environmental goals, and political polarization, REP is likely to grow, with implications for both social and environmental sustainability. This study investigates associations between REP, general pro-environmental attitudes and behaviours, more radical environmental beliefs such as anti-speciesism (AS), and perceptions of government efficacy. Using UK survey data from 2024–2025 (N = 1163), we assessed support for REP through established measures like the Nature Connectedness Scale and New Ecological Paradigm, alongside new scales measuring principled support for radical protest and perceived governmental efficacy. Moderated multiple regression analysis found that AS significantly predicts support for REP, even when controlling for general pro-environmental behaviour, but engagement in public environmental actions was an even stronger predictor. Perceived governmental efficacy did not moderate these relationships but was an independent positive predictor—indicating that support for REP is linked to political optimism, rather than disillusionment. These findings challenge assumptions that REP emerges from political disengagement, suggesting instead that it reflects a broader, hopeful commitment to environmental action in the face of global crisis. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Social Ecology and Sustainability)
37 pages, 3172 KB  
Article
Accountability-Aware Fractional Control for Embodied Intelligent Systems: Mittag-Leffler Stability and Conditional Proxemic Safety
by Slim Dhahri, Essia Ben Alaia, Sahar Almashaan, Hatem Alwardi and Omar Naifar
Symmetry 2026, 18(6), 889; https://doi.org/10.3390/sym18060889 - 24 May 2026
Viewed by 401
Abstract
This paper develops an accountability-aware fractional control framework for embodied intelligent systems in shared human environments. The approach combines a Caputo fractional-order stabilizing law, an intent-evidence realization with softmax belief reconstruction, and a conditional proxemic safety layer. Sufficient conditions are established for local [...] Read more.
This paper develops an accountability-aware fractional control framework for embodied intelligent systems in shared human environments. The approach combines a Caputo fractional-order stabilizing law, an intent-evidence realization with softmax belief reconstruction, and a conditional proxemic safety layer. Sufficient conditions are established for local Mittag-Leffler stability of the augmented error dynamics and forward invariance of the safe set. Numerical results are presented as a theorem-validation benchmark. For the base case with α=0.9, the augmented error norm decays from 1.2359 to 9.90×103 while the safety margin remains strictly positive, and the robustness condition is satisfied with a margin of 1.8641. An α-sweep and a step-size convergence study further show that the fractional order induces a systematic safety–performance trade-off and that the reported behaviors are numerically stable. Additional simulations with four intent classes, bounded observation noise, and Monte Carlo uncertainty stress tests are included to strengthen the numerical evidence beyond the two-intent theorem-validation case. The manuscript also clarifies the quantitative interpretation of the accountability index, the conditional nature of the safety theorem, and an implementable sampled safety-filter realization for concrete robotic platforms. The results support the proposed framework as a mathematically consistent tool for shaping the balance between regulation and proxemic safety. Full article
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20 pages, 2984 KB  
Article
Understanding Oral Self-Care Practices Among People with Diabetes—A Qualitative Study
by Yuqing Zhang, Suzanne G. Leveille, Kimberly Berger, Robert M. Cohen and Tamilyn Bakas
Diabetology 2026, 7(6), 101; https://doi.org/10.3390/diabetology7060101 - 22 May 2026
Viewed by 476
Abstract
Background: A bidirectional association between diabetes and oral health is well established, yet oral self-care is overlooked in diabetes management. Health Belief Model (HBM)-guided oral care interventions have exhibited promising outcomes in the literature but have not been used to guide oral self-care [...] Read more.
Background: A bidirectional association between diabetes and oral health is well established, yet oral self-care is overlooked in diabetes management. Health Belief Model (HBM)-guided oral care interventions have exhibited promising outcomes in the literature but have not been used to guide oral self-care interventions designed for people with diabetes (PWD). Positioned at the early conceptualization and design stage of such a program, this developmental study was to identify self-perceived needs in oral self-care practices and to obtain preliminary feedback among PWD about the blueprint of a new program—DiaOral©. Methods: We conducted semi-structured interviews with 15 PWD recruited from a large healthcare system, with a goal to recruit patients from racially/ethnically diverse urban/suburban zip codes. Interviews explored participants’ oral self-care practices in relation to diabetes. Sample DiaOral© content and images on a blueprint were presented and feedback was solicited. Braun and Clarke’s reflexive thematic analysis was used to code and interpret transcripts, aligning emerging themes with HBM constructs through team-based consensus. Results: Three major themes and 27 sub-themes emerged: (1) lack of knowledge on optimal oral care, (2) low perceived importance of preventive care and oral health in diabetes, and (3) low self-efficacy for performing effective oral self-care. Participants expressed satisfaction with the content and their perceived confidence and interest potentially in using the DiaOral© program based on their preliminary review of the blueprint. Conclusions: Findings support the relevance of HBM constructs in shaping oral self-care among PWD. This developmental study suggests that the DiaOral© blueprint is ready to move forward to website prototype development. Future work will finalize the program and evaluate its efficacy among PWD. Full article
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16 pages, 312 KB  
Article
Do Talent Beliefs Differ Between In-Service and Pre-Service Teachers?
by Julia Klug, Silke Rogl, Kathrin Claudia Hamader and Burkhard Gniewosz
Educ. Sci. 2026, 16(5), 799; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci16050799 - 19 May 2026
Viewed by 231
Abstract
There is limited understanding regarding whether and how teachers’ talent beliefs evolve across career stages. While most prior research conceptualizes talent beliefs across domains, emerging frameworks emphasize field-specific talent beliefs. An established multidimensional model of talent beliefs provides a theoretically grounded structure for [...] Read more.
There is limited understanding regarding whether and how teachers’ talent beliefs evolve across career stages. While most prior research conceptualizes talent beliefs across domains, emerging frameworks emphasize field-specific talent beliefs. An established multidimensional model of talent beliefs provides a theoretically grounded structure for capturing these domain-specific perceptions. Yet comparative evidence across teacher career stages remains limited. Our study examines if verbal and mathematical talent beliefs among in-service teachers and pre-service teachers differ in terms of sources, structure and levels. A total of 307 in-service teachers and 215 pre-service teachers completed validated six-dimensional talent beliefs instruments for both domains and reported sources of their beliefs. Participants—especially pre-service teachers—most strongly attributed their talent beliefs to personal school experiences, while educational science and subject-didactic coursework played a marginal role. Both the mathematical and verbal talent belief scales demonstrated configural and metric invariance, supporting equivalent factor structures and factor loadings across pre-service teachers and in-service teachers. Latent mean comparisons showed that pre-service teachers hold systematically different talent beliefs in comparison to in-service teachers. In-service teachers emphasize talent beliefs concerning domain-specific skills and, for verbal talent, passion—consistent with contemporary talent development frameworks—whereas pre-service teachers focus on external teacher influence and, for mathematical talent, on internal factors. These findings reinforce theoretical claims that talent beliefs are experience-sensitive, multidimensional constructs shaped through socialization in educational contexts. Teacher (further) education should deliberately address the dominance of personal schooling experiences by fostering structured reflection, explicitly targeting belief formation in practice-based courses, and ensuring coherence between higher-education instruction and school-based experiences. Teachers’ impact on their students’ talent development should especially be reflected in further education, since in-service teachers assess their own influence as lower than pre-service teachers do; additionally, passion as a key driver of talent development and the relevance of talent domains should already be highlighted in initial teacher education. Full article
22 pages, 8216 KB  
Article
Performance Evaluation for Fiber Optic Gyroscopes Using Adaptive Belief Rule Base Under Imperfect Data
by Fuqiao Zhang, Zhichao Feng, Jing Ma, Changhua Hu, Zheng Lian and Can Li
Electronics 2026, 15(10), 2160; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15102160 - 18 May 2026
Viewed by 196
Abstract
Performance evaluation for fiber optic gyroscopes (FOG) has become an active research area in recent years. However, such evaluations are often challenged by imperfect data characterized by low quality and non-uniform distribution, which severely affects the accuracy of fiber optic gyroscope performance evaluations. [...] Read more.
Performance evaluation for fiber optic gyroscopes (FOG) has become an active research area in recent years. However, such evaluations are often challenged by imperfect data characterized by low quality and non-uniform distribution, which severely affects the accuracy of fiber optic gyroscope performance evaluations. To address this problem, an adaptive belief rule base (BRB) for data quality and distribution (ABRB-QD) method is proposed for modeling FOG performance evaluation under imperfect data. ABRB-QD effectively integrates data quality assessment and distribution adaptation into a unified belief rule structure. In this method, a data quality factor is introduced based on data stability to solve poor data quality issues. An adaptive membership function is established based on data distribution to transform input information, addressing non-uniform distribution problems in imperfect data. Furthermore, a parameter optimization model is developed to enhance the evaluation accuracy of ABRB-QD. Finally, to illustrate the effectiveness of the developed method, a case study of FOG performance evaluation is conducted. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Systems & Control Engineering)
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22 pages, 12125 KB  
Article
Nondestructive Detection of Moldy Pear Core for Fruit Quality Control Using Vis/NIR Spectroscopy and Enhanced Image Encoding via Deep Learning
by Congkai Liu, Kang Zhao, Yunhao Zhang, Wenbo Fu, Shuhui Bi and Ye Song
Foods 2026, 15(10), 1756; https://doi.org/10.3390/foods15101756 - 15 May 2026
Viewed by 388
Abstract
Moldy pear core constitutes a severe internal defect that compromises fruit quality. This study proposes a nondestructive detection method for Korla pear moldy core using Vis/NIR spectral signals, aimed at supporting post-harvest quality control and automated industrial sorting. We collected spectral signals from [...] Read more.
Moldy pear core constitutes a severe internal defect that compromises fruit quality. This study proposes a nondestructive detection method for Korla pear moldy core using Vis/NIR spectral signals, aimed at supporting post-harvest quality control and automated industrial sorting. We collected spectral signals from pears and quantified the moldy pear core area to classify samples into healthy (S = 0%), slightly moldy (0 < S ≤ 10%), and severely moldy (S > 10%) categories. We constructed a three-tier comparative framework to evaluate the progression from conventional machine learning to advanced deep learning: traditional methods using univariate selection (US) and random forest (RF) for feature extraction followed by support vector machine (SVM) classification; 1D-ResNet for direct processing of spectral signals; and two-dimensional approaches transforming signals into improved gramian angular field (IGAF) or Laplacian pyramid Markov transition field (LPMTF) images processed through deep belief network (DBN), MobileNetv3, and Vision Transformer (ViT). The LPMTF-ViT combination delivered the best performance with 98.98% test accuracy and 94.44% external validation accuracy, significantly exceeding traditional approaches and 1D-ResNet. This innovative approach delivers effective technical support for early-stage, nondestructive detection of internal fruit defects. It also establishes a scalable foundation for automated industrial inspection systems, potentially reducing post-harvest losses while ensuring premium quality control in modern fruit supply chains. Full article
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27 pages, 517 KB  
Article
When Faith Meets Markets: Religiosity, Capitalism and Sustainability in the United States
by Leonel Matar and Gloria Ghantous Haddad
Religions 2026, 17(5), 567; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17050567 - 8 May 2026
Viewed by 490
Abstract
This study advances understanding of how Catholics and Protestants in the United States reconcile capitalist ideology, religious commitment, and sustainability orientation, a triadic relationship largely unexplored in existing scholarship. By integrating System Justification Theory with multidimensional approaches to religiosity, we demonstrate that Economic [...] Read more.
This study advances understanding of how Catholics and Protestants in the United States reconcile capitalist ideology, religious commitment, and sustainability orientation, a triadic relationship largely unexplored in existing scholarship. By integrating System Justification Theory with multidimensional approaches to religiosity, we demonstrate that Economic System Justification and Fair Market Ideology operate through distinct cognitive and motivational logics with divergent implications for sustainability. Religiosity emerges as a demographically contingent moderator, reshaping how market ideology translates into sustainability attitudes differently across age cohorts and income strata. The study extends System Justification Theory by establishing the theoretical independence of defensive system-preserving motivations from proactive market beliefs, while reconceptualizing religious commitment as a conditional mechanism activated under specific biographical and material circumstances rather than a uniform force. Crucially, spiritual resources retain capacity to reorient believers’ navigation of economic participation and sustainability responsibility, illuminating how moral frameworks rooted in religious tradition counterbalance market logic’s encroachment upon value systems. These insights offer pathways for faith communities, sustainability practitioners, and policymakers seeking to foster sustainable attitudes through demographically calibrated interventions that leverage the ethical scaffolding religious commitment provides. Full article
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19 pages, 2109 KB  
Article
Translation and Psychometric Validation of the Teachers’ Beliefs and Intentions Questionnaire (TBIQ) in Chilean Early Childhood Education
by Pamela Soto-Ramirez, Marigen Narea, Maria Francisca Morales and Alejandra Caqueo-Urízar
Educ. Sci. 2026, 16(5), 711; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci16050711 - 1 May 2026
Viewed by 460
Abstract
The Teachers’ Beliefs and Intentions Questionnaire (TBIQ) assesses educators’ beliefs and intentions regarding the importance of sensitive interactions with young children. Understanding these beliefs is particularly relevant in contemporary educational contexts where teacher–child interactions are viewed as central to children’s learning and development. [...] Read more.
The Teachers’ Beliefs and Intentions Questionnaire (TBIQ) assesses educators’ beliefs and intentions regarding the importance of sensitive interactions with young children. Understanding these beliefs is particularly relevant in contemporary educational contexts where teacher–child interactions are viewed as central to children’s learning and development. Despite its use in several countries, there is no validated Spanish version available. This study aimed to translate, culturally adapt, and psychometrically validate a Spanish version of the TBIQ for early childhood education settings in Chile. Following international guidelines for cross-cultural adaptation, the questionnaire was translated into Spanish and administered to early childhood teachers and assistant teachers working in public early childhood education centers. The original two-factor structure (Beliefs and Intentions) was tested using confirmatory factor analyses with robust estimators for ordinal data. Results supported the two-factor model after removing six items with low factor loadings and indicated excellent model fit. Both scales demonstrated high internal consistency. However, measurement invariance across educator roles could not be established, and cross-group comparisons should be interpreted with caution. Despite this limitation, the Spanish version of the TBIQ demonstrates adequate validity and reliability and offers a brief and accessible instrument for research and for the assessment of educators’ beliefs and intentions regarding interaction quality in early childhood education. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Pedagogy in Early Years Education)
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21 pages, 1883 KB  
Review
The Access, Initiation, Engagement, Retention, and Recovery (AIERR) Model: A Stage-Based Framework for Understanding Mental Health Service Utilization
by Cortney VanHook, Hyunjin Lee, Isaiah Ringo and Heather A. Jones
Healthcare 2026, 14(9), 1212; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14091212 - 30 Apr 2026
Viewed by 617
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Mental health service utilization gaps remain a persistent global public health challenge. Among the 61.5 million adults with any mental illness in the United States, nearly half went without treatment in the past year, and dropout rates from outpatient services among those [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Mental health service utilization gaps remain a persistent global public health challenge. Among the 61.5 million adults with any mental illness in the United States, nearly half went without treatment in the past year, and dropout rates from outpatient services among those who do enter care range from 19.7% to 30.8%. Only 30 to 60% of individuals with lifetime mental illness are in active recovery at any given time. Existing theoretical frameworks, including Andersen’s Behavioral Model, the Health Belief Model, and the COM-B framework, each address isolated phases of the care continuum but offer no unified structure for understanding the complete, sequential journey from first contact through sustained recovery. This article introduces the Access, Initiation, Engagement, Retention, and Recovery (AIERR) model to address this theoretical gap. Methods: A conceptual review was conducted following Hulland’s framework for theory development through narrative synthesis. Literature was identified through targeted searches in PubMed, PsycINFO, and Google Scholar, prioritizing peer-reviewed empirical studies, systematic reviews, and foundational theoretical frameworks. Sources were assigned to AIERR stages using predefined decision rules corresponding to each phase’s defining characteristics. Results: AIERR maps five sequential, interconnected stages: Access (structural, cultural, and systemic conditions enabling service reach), Initiation (the transition from provider identification to first appointment attendance), Engagement (active and meaningful treatment participation), Retention (sustained continuity of care), and Recovery (long-term reclamation of life quality and community belonging). For each stage, the framework identifies individual-level and structural-level barriers, facilitating conditions, and targeted intervention points. Conclusions: AIERR advances mental health services theory by unifying previously siloed frameworks, establishing stage-specificity as a core theoretical principle, and reorienting research and intervention strategy toward the upstream structural conditions that produce downstream utilization failures. These theoretical contributions require empirical testing to confirm. Implications for health equity research, clinical practice, and health systems design are discussed. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Healthcare Organizations, Systems, and Providers)
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21 pages, 731 KB  
Article
Myths and Religions in the Ancient Middle East and Misunderstood sub-Saharan Africa: The Case of Swallowing the Universe Between Morphology and Diffusion The Dawn (Birth) of Literature
by Hasan El-Shamy
Literature 2026, 6(2), 7; https://doi.org/10.3390/literature6020007 - 30 Apr 2026
Viewed by 429
Abstract
This study examines the hypothetical issue of the impact of ancient Egyptian beliefs on Africa as a whole. Several focal points are explored. These include (1). The situation of the discipline of folklore within allied academic specializations. (2). Culture diffusion within Africa, and [...] Read more.
This study examines the hypothetical issue of the impact of ancient Egyptian beliefs on Africa as a whole. Several focal points are explored. These include (1). The situation of the discipline of folklore within allied academic specializations. (2). Culture diffusion within Africa, and (3). Spoken folk stories as the only field that integrates, in the space and time continuum, culture on the one hand, with its bearers/(society), on the other. (4). [Beside the] colonial past, the problem, is a result of a number of academic factors that include: (a). The establishment at universities of African studies departments that confine the continent to the sub-Saharan tier excluding Africa of the North; thus, folklore is isolated without a proper stage for studying it academically (see Dorson 1972); (b). The stereotyping concerning the capacity of scholars with unfamiliar names or recognized departmental membership as capable of dealing with theory or innovation, though some of their ideas are adopted by the famous without accrediting the source; (c). Ignoring the unfamiliarity for the family (especially under conditions of secrecy; cf. bias, ethnocentrism); and (d). Inadequacy of academic classroom pedagogy on the basics of verbal lore. Folklore in its original, mainly verbal branches, as represented by Stith Thompson’s monumental works on motif (1955–1958), and its predecessor by Antti Aarne on Type, (1910, 1928, 1961/1964), whose coverage, especially on Africa of the North, is seriously lacking in both the Type and Motif Indexes. The tracking of this line begins with recent calls for need for morphological studies of a South African tale (Dseagu [2001] 2021). An association among various regions of Africa with ancient Egypt concerning mythological contacts merits this investigation. Full article
27 pages, 4162 KB  
Article
Fading Traces: The Goddess Waterfront Lady from a Thai Perspective
by Mingqian Xu
Religions 2026, 17(5), 517; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17050517 - 24 Apr 2026
Viewed by 917
Abstract
Generational amnesia is a common phenomenon in the religious realm. While we inherit established forms of belief, symbols, and ritual traditions, we often lack an understanding of their origins or how they came to be. In the ethnically diverse environment of Southeast Asia, [...] Read more.
Generational amnesia is a common phenomenon in the religious realm. While we inherit established forms of belief, symbols, and ritual traditions, we often lack an understanding of their origins or how they came to be. In the ethnically diverse environment of Southeast Asia, certain cross-cultural connections may also disappear over time. This study seeks to highlight one goddess under the rubric of Chao Mae Thapthim—Waterfront Lady, within a Thai context. Chinese studies have regarded Waterfront Lady as a native Hainanese deity. However, this view fails to resolve the long-standing question concerning historical distribution of the belief across Hainan Island and Chinese communities in Southeast Asia. It also overlooks the internal connections between her and other goddesses referred to as Chao Mae Thapthim, such as the Heavenly Empress Mazu and some local female deities. I will begin with the discussion of the aforementioned issues and proceed to outline a probable cultural ‘worship sphere’ of Waterfront Lady in Thailand. Through this, I aim to present a case of intra-Asian religious interaction and syncretism. Full article
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26 pages, 2536 KB  
Article
An Emotional BDI Framework for Affective Decision Making Based on Action Tendency
by JungGyu Hwang and Sung-Kee Park
Electronics 2026, 15(8), 1691; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15081691 - 17 Apr 2026
Viewed by 482
Abstract
As social robots are increasingly deployed in domains such as healthcare, education, and entertainment, there is growing demand for affective agents that can interpret users’ affective states and respond in contextually appropriate ways. Existing work has established strong foundations for emotion generation and [...] Read more.
As social robots are increasingly deployed in domains such as healthcare, education, and entertainment, there is growing demand for affective agents that can interpret users’ affective states and respond in contextually appropriate ways. Existing work has established strong foundations for emotion generation and appraisal, but the step that connects generated emotion to behavioral execution still relies heavily on model-specific rules or implicit links. We frame this issue as a Mechanism Gap and propose an Emotional BDI framework that introduces Frijda’s action tendency as an intermediate representation layer between the Affective Core and the Belief–Desire–Intention (BDI) Executor. Rather than mapping emotion directly to concrete behavior, the framework first transforms affective state into a directional action tendency and then lets BDI reasoning realize that tendency according to role and context. This creates an explicit emotion-to-behavior mediation structure through which the same emotion can be expressed differently across situations and roles. In an exploratory user evaluation with 26 participants, the proposed model received more favorable ratings than an Emotion-Driven Agent in satisfaction (p=0.010) and appropriateness (p=0.002). Compared with a Cooperative Agent, the proposed model showed a significant advantage only in satisfaction (p=0.030). These findings suggest that the proposed framework offers a useful architectural direction for affective decision making beyond direct mapping or unconditional compliance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Affective Computing in Human–Robot Interaction)
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