ArglyleM., & Beit-HallabmiB., The Social Psychology of Religion.London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1975.
2.
Beit-HallahmiB., Salvation and its vicissitudes.American Psychologist, 1974, 29, 124–129.
3.
BennettW. S.Jr., & HokenstadM. C.Jr., Full-time people workers and conceptions of the “professional”.The Sociological Review Monograph, 1973, 20, 21–45.
4.
FranklV. E., From Death Camp to Existentialism.Boston: Beacon, 1959.
5.
HallC. M., Psychotherapy as secular religion: A middle-class urban phenomenon in post world war II U.S. Paper presented to the 1974 meeting for the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, Washington, D.C.
6.
HalmosP., The Faith of the Counsellors.New York: Schocken, 1966.
7.
HalmosP., The Personal Service Society.New York: Schocken, 1970.
8.
HalmosP., Sociology and the personal service professions. In FreidsonE. (Ed.) The Professions and Their Prospects.Beverly Hills, Sage, 1973.
9.
LondonP., The Modes and Morals of Psychotherapy.New York: Holt, 1964.
10.
NelsonS. H., & TorreyF., The religious functions of Psychiatry.American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 1973, 43, 362–367.
11.
ParsonsT., The Social System.New York: The Free Press, 1961.
12.
RiessmanF., & PearlA., New Careers for the Poor.New York: The Free Press, 1965.
13.
SteadmanH. J., The psychiatrist as a conservative agent of social control.Social Problems, 1972, 20, 264–271.
14.
SzaszT., The Myth of Mental Illness, New York: Harper, 1961.
15.
WilsonB. R., Religion in Secular Society, London: Watts, 1966.