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, motivating individuals and helping unify the group. [1]
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.
Therefore, this unit is related to the totem totem which is the symbol of the tribe mentioned by Durchem in the study of the "basic form" of religion in indigenous society. As it provides tribal name, the symbol appears between tribal gatherings. Its appearance in these scenes, the totem represents both the scene and strong emotional feelings, so it is a collective representative of the group. [2]
For Durchem, religion is a fundamental social phenomenon. God's faith and practice is a method of social organization. This interpretation is detailed in Chapter 7 of Volume 2 / Elementary Faith Chapter 7 "Origins of these beliefs: the origin of Totem principle or Mana concept". According to Dürkem, "God and society are the same.The clan gods can be clans themselves, but this family is imagined by being transformed into the physical form of plants and animals.Totem" [3]
Team members lost their personality and unity with the gods and, according to Durkheim, experienced a sense of losing relationship with the group. [Four]
Durkheim, Emil. Basic form of religious life (1912, Joseph Swin's English translation: 1915) Free Press, 1965: International Standard No. 0-02-908010-X, Harper Collins, 1976: ISBN 0-04-200030-0; Karen A new translation of E. Fields, Free Press 1995: ISBN 0-02-907937-3
According to Durchem, a religion was born and legalized through what he called "collective bubbling". Collective foaming means the moment in social life when individual groups of society gather for religious ceremonies. At these moments, the group gathers the same ideas and participates in the same action. And it helps unify the group of people. When individuals are in intimate contact with each other, and when they are assembled this way, some "electricity" is generated and released, leading the participants to a high degree of collective excitement or embarrassment. This non-personal, non-personal power is the central element of religion, leading individuals to a new ideal realm, raising them beyond themselves, and contacting them with abnormal energy Make it feel as if there is something.
This is a brief discussion on how ÉmileDurkheim's collective foam structure produces negative and positive results. These examples are allegorical and historical. Emile Durkheim claims that collective foaming is a common emotional state among members of society. Charismatic leadership theory suggests that charismatic leaders "share leaders and strong personal relationships with followers, even though the leaders play a formal organizational role" (Hughes, Ginnett, & Curphy, 2012 , P. 583). At Golding 's novel "The Lord of the Flies", the relationship between Ralph and Jack' s boys are very different because of the emotions they build these relationships.