Download Chapter 14

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Religion
Chapter 14
Religion, Science and Sociology
• Can religion and science coexist?
– Because religion involves matters beyond human
observation and because science is all about
observation, these two institutions can potentially conflict.
– Religion is a social institution
– Sociologists analyze the relationship between
society and religion and the role in plays in
people’s lives.
What is Religion?
• Religion – (According to Durkheim)
– “unified system of beliefs and practices relative to sacred things,
uniting adherents into a moral community”
• Transcendent reality – a set of meanings attached
to a world beyond human observation.
Three Elements of Religion
1) Beliefs that Some Things are Sacred
– Sacred – entities/aspects of life that have to do with the
supernatural that inspire awe, reverence, respect, fear
– Profane – ordinary
2) Practices concerning this considered sacred.
3) A moral community resulting from a group’s beliefs and
practices
Functionalism and Religion
Religion performs certain functions:
• Answers questions about the ultimate meaning of life
• Emotional comfort, social support
• Uniting believers into a community (integrative function)
• Provides guidelines for everyday life
• Social Control
• Adaptation
• Support for the Government
• Social Change
– There are also dysfunctions of religion including: War and
Terrorism and Religious Persecution
Symbolic Interactionism and Religion
Peter Berger (The Sacred Canopy, 1990):
– Studied what meanings people give to their religious beliefs
and what religion means to each individual
– Religious Symbols
Symbolic Interactionism and Religion
Focus on Religious Behavior:
A. Belief (religious belief) – statements to which members of
particular religions adhere.
- Fundamentalism
B. Ritual (religious rituals) – practices required or expected of
members of a faith.
- Generally affirm beliefs
C. Experience (religious experience) – feeling or perception of
being in direct contact with God.
Conflict Theory and Religion
Conflict Theorists are highly critical of religion
• The ruling class uses religion to justify its economic, political,
and social advantage over the oppressed.
• Marx saw religion as “The opium of the people” and believed
that religion diverted people’s attention from the oppression
they were facing
• Legitimization of Social Inequalities
– Social Arrangements Represent God’s Desires
– Divine Rights of Kings
– Pharaoh as God
– Hindu Cast System
Capitalism and the Protestant Ethic
• Weber believed that religion sometimes encourages
social change.
• Capitalism involved a radical redefinition of work, it
became a moral obligation rather than a necessity.
– Religion Held the Key to Modernization
Capitalism and the Protestant Ethic
• Weber referred to the cluster of values and
attitudes stressing hard work, thrift, and discipline
as the Protestant ethic.
• Weber found the roots of the Protestant ethic in
the 17th century Puritan theology of Calvinism – a
person’s fate was predetermined by God.
Focus on Theoretical Perspectives:
Religion
World’s Major Religions
• There are three major Western religions: Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam.
• The two major Eastern religions are Hinduism and Buddhism.
Western Religions: Judaism
• Originated 4,000 Years Ago
• Fundamental Change in Religion to Monotheism
• Contemporary - Orthodox, Reform, Conservative
• Certain practices, such as dietary restrictions,
observance of Sabbath, and religious holidays are,
however, binding in traditional Judaism.
• About 17 million followers of Judaism, 5 million of whom
reside in Israel; remainder found mainly in Eastern
Europe, 80 percent of the world’s Jews US and Israel.
Western Religions: Christianity
• Also Monotheistic
• Believe Jesus Christ is Messiah
– Born in Poverty to a Virgin
– At about 30 Jesus Began Teaching
• Belief in Christ’s resurrection
• Christianity is the world’s largest and most diverse religion:
with more than 2 billion followers.
Western Religions: Islam
• World’s Third Monotheistic Religion
– shares its Abrahamic origin with Jews and Christians
• Founded by Muhammad (Born in Mecca)
• About Age 40 had Visions from God
– Visions and Teachings Written in Koran
• World’s Fastest Growing Religion
– About 1.6 billion followers
• All Muslims subscribe to the Five Pillars of Islam:
– a declaration of faith,
• accepting the authenticity of Muhammad as God’s Prophet
– a commitment to pray five times each day,
– charity,
– to keep the fast of Ramadan,
– and a pilgrimage to Mecca in Saudi Arabia once in lifetime.
Eastern Religions: Hinduism
• No Specific Founder
• Chief Religion in India for 2,000 - 4,000 Years
• No Canonical Scripture
– an ancient oral tradition not committed to writing until the Middle
Ages.
• Brahmanas, Bhagavad-Gita, and Upanishads Expound
Moral Virtues
• People Make Sacrifices to gods
• Polytheistic - Many gods
• Central Belief is Karma - Spiritual Progress
• No Final Judgment - Reincarnation
• Spiritual Perfection Results in Nirvana
• About 780 million Hindus today. Nearly all Hindus live in
South Asia, particularly India, whose population is 80 %
Hindu.
Eastern Religions: Buddhism
• Siddhartha Gautama Founded in about 600 B.C.
– Buddhism originated in sixth-century B.C.E. India as an
alternative interpretation of Hinduism
• Four Noble Truths
– Existence is Suffering
– Origin of Suffering is Desire
– Suffering Ceases when Desire Ceases
– Follow “Noble Eightfold Path” to End Desire
• Enlightenment - a state individually attained; achieved
through intense meditation and good deeds.
• Buddhists, numbering approximately 360 million, are
concentrated in the Far East and Southeast Asia.
Religion in the U.S.
• Religious participation goes up as one ages
• 94 % of Americans believe that there is a God
• Importance of
religion in one’s life
How US Adults Identify with Religion
Religion in the US
• Toleration
• Fundamentalist Revival
• The Electronic Church
• Secularization
The Future of Religion
• Religion Thrives
• People will Always Ponder the Purpose of Life
• Science Cannot Tell Us About
– The Existence of God
– The Purpose of Life
– An Afterlife
– Morality