1 / 15

RELS 110: Introduction to World Religions

WELCOME!. RELS 110: Introduction to World Religions. Greg Melchin gmelchin@stfx.ca. Course objectives:. To gain an understanding of the beliefs, practices, and histories of the major religions of the world:. Indigenous Traditions Hinduism Jainism Buddhism Taoism & Confucianism Shinto.

lance
Télécharger la présentation

RELS 110: Introduction to World Religions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. WELCOME! RELS 110:Introduction to World Religions Greg Melchin gmelchin@stfx.ca

  2. Course objectives: • To gain an understanding of the beliefs, practices, and histories of the major religions of the world: • Indigenous Traditions • Hinduism • Jainism • Buddhism • Taoism & Confucianism • Shinto • Zoroastrianism • Judaism • Christianity • Islam • Sikhism • New Religious Movements

  3. How do you talk about religion and spirituality in university? • Religions: “True” or “False”? • Do my personal beliefs matter? • Religious Studies vs. Theology • Religionswissenschaft: The study or science of religion • Historical method • Phenomenological method

  4. Group Assignment: In groups of 5, discuss the following: • Name, year, program, major • What is religion?

  5. What is Religion? • Ninian Smart, a scholar of religion, identifies seven “dimensions” of religion: • Ritual dimension • Narrative/mythic dimension • Experiential/emotional dimension • Social/institutional dimension • Ethical/legal dimension • Doctrinal/philosophical dimension • Material dimension

  6. Why Are There Religions? • 3 perspectives: • Materialist perspective • Functionalist perspective • Belief perspective • Perspectives are not necessarily mutually exclusive

  7. Materialist Perspective • Scientific Materialism: the belief that only the natural, material world exists – the supernatural world does not exist • Theory was developed during the European Enlightenment (18th and 19th centuries), exemplified by thinkers such as Ludwig Feuerbach • “That which we neither understand or control, we fear.” – Feuerbach • Scientific materialism holds that religion invented by humans; God is a projection of human qualities • Are there any prominent scientific materialists today?

  8. Scientific Materialism Opium of the people! • Communist Manifesto author Karl Marx (1804-1872) argued that religion is used to control people • Religion provides justification or escape from real-world social injustice. • Many Communist societies in the 20th century outlawed or restricted religion

  9. Functionalist Perspective • The functionalist perspective is that religion exists because it is useful to people and society • Influential French sociologist Emile Durkheim (1858-1917) argued that religion provides the “glue” that holds society together • Religion teaches values that are useful to societies, such as duty, altruism, justice, compassion, love • Psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud (1856-1938) views religion as a “collective fantasy” fulfilling psychological needs • God, for Freud, serves as a substitute parental figure • For Freud, religion resembles mental illness

  10. Functions of Religion • Provides a stable, consistent worldview • Can help provide meaning and inner strength to overcome personal crises • Provides a framework for understanding “ultimate” questions – the meaning of life, death, etc. • Some religions provide “dogma” – specific answers to such questions

  11. “Perhaps some religion could help him!”

  12. Belief Perspective • For many religious believers, religion exists because there truly is a “Supreme Reality” (e.g. God) • Belief in an Ultimate Reality may be based on non-rational ways of knowing (belief or faith), or it may be based on personal questioning and reasoning

  13. Religious Experience • Throughout history and around the world, many people claim to have had religious or mystical experiences • These experiences are often described as being direct knowledge of, or contact with, the Ultimate Reality • The German scholar Joachim Wach (1898-1955) lists four characteristics of mystical experiences: • Contact with “Unseen Reality” • Involves a person’s entire being • Is an extremely intense experience • Motivates a person to changed ways of living, sometimes including deeper involvement in a religious tradition

  14. Group Assignment “What is truth?” • In groups of 5, discuss: • What is truth? • How do we decide what is true?

  15. For Next Week: • Get course textbook: • Mary Pat Fisher, Living Religions, 8th ed. Upper Saddle River: Prentice Hall, 2011. • Read Chapter 1

More Related