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Major Religions of India, 2001. Examines historical background, key features, concepts, rituals of Hinduism, Jainism, Sikhism, Zoroastrianism. 1,125 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 7 sources, $ 39.95 »
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From the Paper "This research examines the major religions of India, notably Hinduism, Jainism, Sikhism, and Zoroastrianism. The research will discuss major features of the religions, including historical background, key concepts, rituals, and relevance to social organization in India, as well as the distribution of population and elements of religious diversity in countries where Indian religions are found.
Religion, with the Hindu religion predominant, emerges as the decisive element in all areas of Indian history and contemporary society. To see why Hindu culture predominates in India, claiming some 700 million adherents and accounting for 80% of Indians' religion ("Hinduism"), it is important to know that its history goes back to about 1500 BCE. It was in that period that the highly developed agricultural civilization in the .."
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Eastern and Western Religions, 2002. A comparative analysis of the main religions of the East and West and how the religions affect the cultures in which they are dominant. 3,675 words (approx. 14.7 pages), 22 sources, MLA, $ 101.95 »
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Abstract This paper examines the beliefs of some of the main religions of the world. It shows how the principal distinction between Eastern and Western religions is that the former are dominated by mystical and transcendent components meant to be experienced by individuals and the latter by rational, doctrinal sets of belief meant to be shared by individuals in a community of faith. It analyzes how the major Western religions dominate European and American culture whereas those of the East, which dominate Asia and Africa, are distinguished not only as modes of worship and belief but also as features of the societies in which they are practiced. It evaluates how Eastern and Western religions are not mutually exclusive, they just overlap or converge in multiple ways.
From the Paper "A peaceful habit of mind prepares one to enjoy material reality with an appropriate attitude, in the event material fortune disappears. In the Lama's formulation of the Four Noble Truths of sorrow as four factors of happiness, the key is to train the mind, or Sem, away from preoccupation with wealth and toward contentment. That is consistent with the noble truth about stopping the craving, and it points in the direction of the noble truth about good moral conduct. The Lama's view of education of the human psyche in compassion and generosity toward others in the context of humanity's social tendencies can be seen as a link to spiritual experience. Connection to and compassion for others may not guarantee a life without suffering; to this, Tibetan Buddhism responds that a prepared mind has taken the trouble to reflect on suffering as a natural part of Samsara, or the unending cycles of life (Lama and Cutler 140) "
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World Religions, 2004. An overview and summary of many of the main religions of the world, including Christianity, Judaism, and Eastern religions. 3,722 words (approx. 14.9 pages), 5 sources, APA, $ 102.95 »
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Abstract This paper examines most of the world's religions and discusses them in the following contexts: founder and history; gods; views on creation; views on death and the afterlife; and major holidays, festivals, and rites.
The religions discussed are Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism, Taoism, Shinto, Zoroastrianism, Judaism, Baha'ism, Hinduism, and Wicca.
From the Paper "Like Christianity is to Judaism, Buddhism formed basically as an offshoot of Hinduism. The historical Buddha, known as Gautama Buddha, was a high caste Hindu named Siddhartha who underwent a period of fasting and meditation with monks. Afterwards, he rejected some of the main tenets of Hinduism and preached a Middle Path or Middle Way between worldliness and extreme asceticism. A group of followers helped to organize the Buddha?s teachings into a formal religion, much as the Christian apostles and later theologians codified Christianity. Therefore, Gautama Buddha was not so much the founder of the religion as its key prophet and figurehead."
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East Asia Religions, 2002. Discusses East Asian religions as human-centered rather than metaphysical mysteries. 2,025 words (approx. 8.1 pages), 4 sources, $ 71.95 »
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Abstract Discusses East Asian religions as human-centered rather than metaphysical mysteries. Overview of the principal characteristics of the major East Asian Religions: Confucianism, Taoism, Buddhism. Development in China, Korea and Japan. Adaptation of Confucian ideals & its impact on society. Conflict between Buddhism , imported from India, with indigenous religions of Confucianism and Taoism. Comparison of Confusianist & Taoist orientations to Western religion.
From the Paper "The religions of China, Korea, and Japan have in common an emphasis on the essential unity of all things and the necessity of the individual's integration with nature, family, and society. In addition they have a strong basis in ancestrism and, for the most part, favor a level of syncretism that, especially for those in the Western monotheist traditions, seems remarkable. The overriding common characteristic of East Asian religion, however, is that it is human-centered and seen not, primarily, as the source of solemn metaphysical mysteries but as "part of a ring of relativistic commitments whose real center is inflexible norms or propriety for human and divine relations" (Ellwood & McGraw 180). A brief overview of the principal characteristic of the main East Asian religions will demonstrate how this region of the world has been a distinct entity in terms of the nations' reliance on ..."
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A Contrast Between Women in the Hindu and Sikh Religions, 2002. An analysis of the acceptance of women in prayer and religious aspects of the Hindu and Sikh religions. 3,485 words (approx. 13.9 pages), 15 sources, MLA, $ 98.95 »
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Abstract The author explains how recent world events have highlighted the plight of women in several given societies with many atrocities still occurring against women in the name of religion. He contends that while some religions embrace the contributions of women, others completely ignore or forbid it. In some religions, women are encouraged to participate fully in the activities of the church, in others; women are not even allowed to enter places of worship. In addition, the social treatment of women differs according to the religion embraced by each particular society. While women are regarded as equals to men within some religious cultures, other cultures view the woman as little more than a slave and piece of property. To depict the realities of the statements made above, two religions and the way each regards and treats women are covered in this paper: Hinduism and Sikhism. Toward this end, the basic tenants and beliefs of each of these religions is provided.
From the Paper "The Hindu religion has developed over the last four thousand years, and lacks the organizational hierarchy found in many other religions. Unlike Western religions, Hinduism is a mixture of many beliefs and aspects, including that of magic, nature worship, animal veneration, and an unlimited number of deities and idols. In other words, the Hindu?s find religion in almost everything, such as places like the Himalayan where they believe the God?s live. The basic tenants of the religion hold that, ?the multiplicity of gods and goddesses in its pantheon as manifestations of the one divine spirit, Braham? (Smart 70). According to Hindu?s, Braham is the ?ultimate level of reality, a philosophical absolute, serenely blissful, beyond all ethical or metaphysical limitations? (Kussman and Jain, 83). In Hinduism, the basic view of God is one of ?infinite being, infinite consciousness and infinite bliss? (83). Another important aspect of the Hindu religion is that of rituals. In Hinduism, these rituals include such activities as the lighting of incense, bathing, eating, and marriage ceremonies, all of which are meant to show that God is in everything (Smart 71)"
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Mystery Religions, 2004. This paper examines how the mystery religions have influenced Christianity. 2,260 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 10 sources, MLA, $ 79.95 »
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Abstract In this article, the writer discusses how the mystery religions influenced the religion of Christianity. The writer explores a number of the ancient mystery religions. The secret rituals of these mystery religions as well as their similarities are discussed. Most importantly, the writer examines the impact of these religions on Christianity and discusses why they are no longer practiced.
From the Paper "By the end of the first century small communities of Christians could be found in many of places in the Greco-Roman world. According to Jeffrey Sheler, writing for U.S. News World Report as the movement expanded during the second and third centuries, it proved to be anything but simple to deliver a consistent message. The early Christian church was torn by persecution and internal division as Christians struggled to understand and apply the meaning of Jesus' life, death and resurrection in the religious ... "
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East Asian Religions, 2002. A brief overview of the principal characteristic of the main East Asian religions. 2,523 words (approx. 10.1 pages), 5 sources, MLA, $ 76.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses how the religions of China, Korea and Japan have in common an emphasis on the essential unity of all things and the necessity of the individual's integration with nature, family and society. It shows how some of the most important religions in East Asia have been Confucianism and Taoism, which were indigenous to China and Buddhism, which was imported to China from India and then spread to Korea and from there to Japan. Through a brief overview of the main beliefs of these main East Asian religions, it demonstrates how this region of the world has been a distinct entity in terms of the nations' reliance on similar types of worship, shared faiths that are adapted to separate cultures and similar conceptions of the relationship between religion and society.
From the Paper "Devotion to ancestors and the burial of the dead characterized Chinese civilization from its earliest beginnings and these aspects of religion have persisted throughout history. But the emergence of the concept of the Tao, usually translated as "way", was to influence the formation of the two great indigenous religions of China. The Tao--and "how to know it, live it and construct a society that exemplifies it"--has been the thread that runs through all Chinese thought and religious expression and has, consequently, affected Korean and Japanese civilization as well (Ellwood & McGraw 183). Chinese thinkers held that there were three realms in which the Tao could be realized: nature, society, and the individual's inner being."
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?Living Religions", 2004. A review of the book, ?Living Religions" by Mary Pat Fisher, with an emphasis on Judaism. 1,082 words (approx. 4.3 pages), 0 sources, MLA, $ 37.95 »
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Abstract This paper introduces the book, "Living Religions" by Mary Pat Fisher, and specifically explains how and why Judaism evolved into separate groups from its original foundation. It looks at how the Jewish religion is one of the oldest on earth, and from its beginnings, there have always been different groups of Jews who believed in different ways. It examines how the Jewish religion has split into many factions over the years, including Christianity, and how, because of this, the Jewish religion may be one of the most important and essential religions still practiced today.
From the Paper "As the author notes, the Jews, who had lived in many different cultures and under many different foreign rulers, including Hellenistic (Greek) Alexander the Great, also "became somewhat open to cross-cultural religious borrowings." Some of the beliefs of others became accepted by the some of the Jews, but not all of them, and so another basis for different believing groups was established. As Fisher writes, "?and the rationalistic, humanistic influences of Hellenism led many wealthy and intellectual Jews, including the priests in Jerusalem, to adopt a Hellenistic attitude of skepticism rather than unquestioning belief." They called these two different groups the "traditionalists" and those who "embraced the Greek ways," and the two groups had trouble getting along together."
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Global Religions, 2002. Examining the affect of globalization on the world's main religions. 1,258 words (approx. 5.0 pages), 10 sources, MLA, $ 42.95 »
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Abstract This paper looks at how the process of globalization affects world religions. It asks whether religion is somehow exempted from this phenomenon affecting all aspects of the world and whether religion is so well protected or insulated that it is immune to the changes. The writer concludes that religion is not immune to change.
From the Paper "It was religion that first preached the idea of the oneness of humankind. More than 2600 years ago Zoroastrianism espoused the ideal of a single human family. And yet, as globalisation drives humankind towards some sort of interdependent world the voice and vision of religion has all but faded into oblivion. The religious vision of the unity of humankind has very little in common with the motives and goals of globalisation. For religion - and almost every major religion embody some notion of the oneness of the human family - the essence of universal unity is our common humanity derived in some instances from our faith in the one God. "
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Major Religions in Western Europe, 2001. A discussion on how Western Europe was influenced by the Greek and Roman religions. 1,790 words (approx. 7.2 pages), 4 sources, $ 57.95 »
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Abstract This paper examines how religion has influenced Western Europe society: culturally, politically and economically. The author focuses on the Greek and Roman religions and their impact on other religions such as Christianity.
From the Paper "One may begin a description of the ways in which religion has influenced the West by looking at the role of religion in Greece and Rome, since these two great empires were undoubtedly highly influential in terms of molding at some level every important aspect of Western European society. Of course, Roman and Greek religions did not arise from the thin air; they are based on older traditions and remained (especially in the case of Rome) syncretistic religions throughout the course of their respective empires. Greek and Roman settlements allowed for the incorporation of local beliefs into the state religion in a way that helped to ensure that those peoples who had been subjugated by the colonial powers would be less inclined to object to their loss of political autonomy. The fact that Greek or Roman rulers would allow local gods and semi-divine figures to be incorporated into the pantheon of the major gods did not negate the fact that various peoples were being subjugated but it must have made their continuing (if forced) inclusion in the empire easier to bring about (Sissa 119)."
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Scientology and Unity Religions, 2006. A comparative analysis of how Scientology and Unity religions can impact the workplace. 2,487 words (approx. 9.9 pages), 7 sources, MLA, $ 75.95 »
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Abstract Religious discussion in the workplace can often provide new insight into our co-workers. The discussion of religion can bring new ideas to minds unfamiliar with certain concepts or it may provoke arguments among those devout within their own religion. This paper explores two of those religions' basic principles, that of Scientology and the Unity Church and their possible impact upon the workplace overall and those people involved.
Outline
The Basics of Scientology
Scientology and the Workplace
Unity Church Basics
Unity Church in the Workplace
From the Paper "The Unity Church is said to have started in 1845, the year Mary Caroline Page was born. She was to become a schoolteacher who taught children the lessons of being good and spiritual. Changing her name to Myrtle, she eventually published a weekly magazine called Wee Wisdom. (http://www.unityonline.org/discover_hist-2.htm). Much of Unity's teaching and publishing is positive, practical Christianity. The Unity religion teaches the practical application in everyday life. They teach the principles of Truth taught and exemplified by Jesus Christ, as interpreted in the light of modern-day experience by Unity (School) and the Association of Unity Churches. " "
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Ancient Asian Religions, 2004. An analysis of ancient Asian religions, specifically Zoroastrianism and Hinduism. 1,978 words (approx. 7.9 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 62.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses religions of ancient Asia. The paper contends that, just as the people and customs of ancient Asia were varied, so too were their religious beliefs. As centralized governments and cities came to power, certain religions became favored over others with the aim of establishing a religious base for rule. The paper focuses on Zoroastrianism and Hinduism. The paper claims that these are two of the oldest religions still in practice today, and their histories mirror the most significant events of the ancient world.
From the Paper "Ancient Asia was home to many varied peoples, cultures, and religions. The origins of a large number of the prevalent religions in modern Asia date back millennia before the start of the western calendar and Christianity. A myriad of polytheistic and monotheistic religions possessing extremely detailed forms of worship and world views were born out of similar social conditions. The start of formalized religions coincides with the dawn of civilization, or more specifically, the city. Naturally, the earliest religions took on a number of traditionally held beliefs and customs of the native people and worked them into a more rigorous dogma of one form or another. In addition to standardizing the manner by which people worshipped, these formalized religions--particularly in ancient times--were utilized as a tool for social order and extended power to the ruling parties. In short, religions in ancient Asian societies became matters of state by which all actions of the state could be executed and justified. The specific religious view adopted by a given society reveals greatly the values, morals, and social beliefs ingrained in that society and there are many parallels to be drawn between the numerous religions born out of ancient Asia."
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Religions and their Social Influence, 2002. How the spread of the early religions influenced the culture and society which embraced them. 2,385 words (approx. 9.5 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 73.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses how the three great proselytizing religions of the world -- Christianity, Buddhism, and Islam -- spread throughout major portions of the world and had enormous effects on the political and social development of nations and cultures. It examines how the degree of interpenetration between social organization and religious life varied in these three cases. It shows how these religions demonstrated that the establishment of a religion that is intrinsically connected with a form of social organization tends to produce the firmest, most lasting type of religious orientation in a society.
From the Paper "From the fourth century the Roman Emperors in the West had taken a strong interest in the affairs of the Christian Church in the hope that unified belief would aid them in unifying the people of their disintegrating empire. But the invasions of the Germanic tribes, and others, brought about the fall of the empire. Of the Germanic tribes only the Franks were early converts to Christianity and in 800 the Frankish king Charlemagne, attempting to assume the authority of the fallen empire, had himself crowned Holy Roman Emperor by the pope at Rome. This led to the gradual unification of Christian belief among most people of Western Europe and Christian ideals and notions of hierarchy became the foundation for social development. The Church was organized along hierarchical lines copied from the Romans, with each major region having an archbishop who reported to Rome and ruled over the bishops (usually one in each important city) who, in turn ruled over the various parish priests. But the establishment of the Holy Roman Empire also led to centuries of conflict between the popes and the emperors over spiritual and temporal authority. One of the chief quarrels was over the right to appoint bishops--which many kings and the emperor believed was their right."
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Seasonal Festivals in 3 Major Religions, 2002. This paper discusses in depth the seasonal celebrations of three major religions: Hinduism, Christianity, and Buddhism. 1,400 words (approx. 5.6 pages), 3 sources, $ 53.95 »
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Abstract It also discusses the correlation between converting religions like Christianity and pre-existing pagan rituals (equinoxes, etc.), particularly how pagan celebrations are replaced by religious ceremonies of the new religion. An example used is Easter/Spring Equinox. The paper concludes with a discussion of the universal importance of both religion and seasonal change in human experience.
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Eastern Religions, 2004. This paper looks at concepts of divinity in eastern religions. 1,350 words (approx. 5.4 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 47.95 »
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Abstract In this article, the writer studies the concepts of divinity in Eastern religions. The writer discusses key concepts in Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism, Confucianism, Taoism and Shinto. In this paper, the writer looks at the social and ethical concerns expressed in these religions.
From the Paper "The purpose of this research is to examine the concept of the divine in selected Asian religious traditions. The plan of the research will be to set forth key concepts in Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism, Confucianism, Taoism and Shinto and to argue that concepts of divinity and worshipful practice are secondary in these religions to social and ethical concerns. Hinduism dominates virtually all aspects of Indian society. To see why Hindu culture predominates in India it is important to know that its history extends to about ... "
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