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Д. А. Крячков UNIT III
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Д. А. Крячков UNIT III clashed in recent years, and fresh Muslim-Christian conflicts are __________ (21) in Côte d’Ivoire and Kenya. Statistics on civil unrest __________ (22) that once a minority religious group in a given country __________ (23) 10–20 percent of the population, it can sufficiently resist policies promoting religious harmony and can even sustain struggle for liberation. Clearly, other factors __________ (24) to such strife besides religion. Yet although many con- flicts are the result of politics, economics, and governmental mismanagement, religious ideas do __________ (25). Collective action depends on how social groups __________ (26) the world in which they live and how they __________ (27) their own identities in relation to the identities of others. The way religious institutions address literacy, schooling, governance, human rights, and interreligious dialogue can support governments’ ability to __________ (28) to crises surrounding these issues or exacerbate religious strife. Ex. 41. a) Read the following article and identify its topic and thesis. b) Think of a possible title. c) Comment on the ideas of the article. The news media continue to stretch the boundaries of religion far beyond the usual parameters in the American popular imagination. Is belief in climate change a religion, as Rep. Steve King as- serts? Did Steve Jobs create a new iReligion with all his visionary iProducts? Has Jerry Garcia from the Grateful Dead achieved the status of a spiritual icon? Look on the pages of HuffPost, follow the religion headlines in Google news, read through the posts at Patheos, and you will see that religion is no longer simply a matter of faith in God. Instead, it is … anything and everything imaginable. The truth about religion is that there is no one Truth but rather multiple versions of many possible truths. Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, called religion a neurosis and claimed that it was, at bottom, an illusion; Karl Marx, who called for the workers of the world to unite, famously stated that religion was the opiate of the masses; William James, American pragmatist and innova- tive psychologist, defined religion as the feelings, acts, and experiences of individuals in their soli- tude as it relates to their apprehension of the divine; 20th century theologian Paul Tillich asserted that religion is an expression of ultimate concern. The great religious traditions all provide very different teachings about religious truth: no god and impermanence in Buddhism; multiple gods and one underlying cosmic reality in Hinduism; one God who created the cosmos and humans in the three monotheistic religions; and among indigenous religious cultures throughout the world, an understanding that sacred powers perme- ate the cosmos with a variety of spiritual truths tied to these powers. Who is right? Where can one locate the ultimate authority on these matters? Is it the Bible? The Koran? The Rig Veda? Science? Fox News? In our increasingly pluralistic and religiously diverse world, is there only one arbiter of truth, reality, the meaning of life in these sacred matters? We have fundamentalist atheists on one side of the spectrum wanting to get rid of religion and all of its toxicity; on the other side are religious fundamentalists looking to purify the world of all the false religions. The rest of us in the middle — Christians, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, Hin- dus, Nones — are learning to live with the unavoidable fact that multiple religious perspectives and communities must learn to live together if not harmoniously than at least with a minimum amount of respect and toleration. |
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