The Place of Ethics in Modern Theories of Religion

Despite the common assumption that ethics is central to religion, religions have often been classified into those that stress rituals rather than ethics and those that stress ethics rather than rituals. Theories of religion have sometimes accepted this division, but as generalizations about all rel...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Diskus
Main Author: Segal, Robert Alan 1948- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: 2007
In: Diskus
Online Access: Volltext (kostenfrei)
Parallel Edition:Electronic
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Summary:Despite the common assumption that ethics is central to religion, religions have often been classified into those that stress rituals rather than ethics and those that stress ethics rather than rituals. Theories of religion have sometimes accepted this division, but as generalizations about all religions, they have sought uniformities among religions. The divide within theories has been between those theories that deny centrality to ethics in religion and those theories that grant it. This division corresponds, roughly, to that between nineteenth-century theories of religion and twentieth-century theories. To illustrate this division, I compare one representative nineteenth-century theorist, E. B. Tylor, with one twentieth-century one, Sigmund Freud.
ISSN:0967-8948
Contains:Enthalten in: Diskus