Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMartina Bailey Modified over 8 years ago
1
INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF RELIGION WHAT IS RELIGION? SOME THEORIES ON THE SOCIAL ORIGINS OF RELIGION AND THE EARLIEST FORMS OF RELIGION MAJOR PERIODS OF RELIGIOUS CHANGE
2
DEFINING RELIGION Substantive – Rites and practices related to a belief in spiritual beings. – Ultimate reality; Sense of the Holy Other Functional – A unified system of beliefs and practices which unite into one community all those who adhere to them. Combination – Religion is a structure of discourses and practices (beliefs and rites) common to a social group that refer to a force or forces that the believers consider superior to their natural or social surroundings and in whose regard people express a sense of dependence and feel obligated to a particular pattern of conduct in Society.
3
ORIGINS OF RELIGION Personal – Emotional Becker – release of stress related to death. – Relieves Anxiety and Fear – Provides hope confidence – It creates an Identity. – Intellectual Tyler – animism based on dreams. Spencer – naturism based on natural forces. Social – Society Totemic – representation of power and clan. – Social Alienation Feuerbach – The divine is symbolic representation of unfulfilled aspirations. Marx – Alienation results from production.
4
MAJOR HISTORICAL PERIODS Pre-Axial – Self is submerged in family and tribe – Membership is what is important – Social life is one unified whole. Religion is not distinct from other aspects. (No word for religion) – Perceive the world as alive with powers and invisible beings Axial Age – Urbanization and Violence – Emergence of the importance of the individual self Questions of identity Need for a new searching for fulfillment or immortality Growing consciousness of separation between Sacred and Temporal Eventual growth of Sacred within oneself – Need for new moral and legal codes Ethical Component against egotism: expressed in greed, selfishness, fear and despair Universal component – Benevolence for All not just one’s own people
5
Modernity – Laws of natural and social world reside within nature and social world themselves – Laws are knowable by human reason – Knowledge exists in distinct categories that are causally related in unilinear and hierarchical fashion – Humanity has potential of self-perfectibility Postmodernity – Historical consciousness – Social construction of reality – Natural and social worlds marked by complexity, randomness and uncertainty Religious Reactions to Change – Romantic Conservatives – Adaptors – Critical Agency
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.