Created: 2020-07-24 Fri 13:13
Key stroke | Effect |
---|---|
n, space | next slide |
p | previous slide |
f | fullscreen |
esc, o | overview slide |
m | toggle menu |
audio inlay | start/stop audio playback |
Religious studies is the attempt to study these things, taking homo religiosus seriously
Definitions help us with basic questions like: How do we know? How do we accumulate knowledge?
(James Martineau) | Religion is the belief in an ever living God, that is, in a Divine Mind and Will ruling the Universe and holding moral relations with mankind. |
(Friedrich Schleiermacher) | Religion is the feeling of absolute dependence or the consciousness that the whole of our spontaneous activity comes from a source outside of us . |
(Karl Marx) | Religious suffering is, at one and the same time, the expression of real suffering and a protest against real suffering. Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people. |
(Anthony Wallace) | Religion is a set of rituals, rationalized by myth, which mobilizes supernatural powers for the purpose of achieving or preventing transformations of state in man or nature . |
(Emile Durkheim) | Religion is only sentiment inspired by the group in its members, but projected outside of the consciousness that experiences them, and objectified . |
(Signmund Freud) | Freud refers to religion as an illusion which is "perhaps the most important item in the psychical inventory of a civilization". In his estimation, religion provides for defense against "the crushingly superior force of nature" and "the urge to rectify the shortcomings of civilization which made themselves painfully felt". He concludes that all religious beliefs are "illusions and insusceptible of proof." |
(James G. Frazer) | Religion is a propitiation or conciliation of powers superior to man which are believed to direct and control the course of Nature and of human life . |
(William James) | The very fact that there are so many (definitions of religion) … is enough to prove that the word “religion” cannot stand for any single principle or essence, but is rather a collective name … |
Religion is intimately connected with human thought.
Even those who focus on practice have beliefs, develop doctrines, and emphasize the importance of certain teachings in the religious life essential to their way of life.
To some extent, all religious experience is an emotional experience.
Friedrich Schleiermacher characterized religion as a feeling of absolute dependence.
Rudolf Otto, characterized religion as the experience of the holy. And this experience is one that inspires feelings of fear, awe, terror, and love.
Clearly action is an essential component of any religion. Examples of include:
In religion there is an essential tension between the individual and the community
In most times and places, religion and morality are intertwined
Perhaps a more familiar concept. List of criteria in different religions to distinguish them.
Created by Dale Hathaway.