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Population foaming (CE) is a sociological concept introduced by Émile Durkheim. According to Dürkem, communities and societies can sometimes gather, communicate the same idea, and participate in the same action. Such events then cause collective foaming, stimulate individuals and help unify the group. Collective foaming is the basis of Émile Durkheim's religious theory, as he explained in 1912 's Basic Form of Religious Life. Durkheim believes that sacred and sacred universal religious dichotomy comes from the lives of the members of these tribes: most of their lives are spared for trivial things such as hunting and gatherings It is. These tasks are troublesome. Rarely the entire tribe gathers is sacred, and the high energy levels associated with these events are directed to things and sacred people.
Discussions by sociologists and philosophers on important works of Durkheim have provided little clarity and accuracy in the discussion of collective foaming and its role in rituals and the creation of new ideals and social creativity. Perhaps this is because sociology almost ignores the symbolic and superhuman anthropological methods of ritual and symbolic phenomena. Ideal appearance is a real part. In practice, however, this is not the maximum clarity that Durkheim can bring to the collective foaming concept of vague definition. 199
Collective foaming and communism: ritual and social process models of Emil Dülkem and Victor Turner