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Transcendence and Immanence
(3,184 words)
[German Version]
I. Natural Sciences The natural sciences themselves do not work with a concept of transcendence as the opposite of nature. They consider “nature” or the “cosmos” (Cosmology) the totality of reality.
1. Nevertheless the natural sciences are based on a finitized epistemology. Kurt Gödel’s first incompleteness theorem of 1931 demonstrated that it is impossible in principle to prove within a formal system both the system’s internal consistency and its completeness. There are also physical limits to what can be known. The universe is very large but finite. There are in all some 1080 stable …
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Religion Past and Present
Solidarity
(1,545 words)
[German Version]
I. Religious Studies The term
solidarity (from neo-Lat.
solidaritas, derived from
solidus, “solid, firm”; Fr.
solidarité) denotes the cohesiveness of a “group,” ultimately society, expressed in a generally ethical sense of cohesion. In the history of the term, originally borrowed from legal usage (Wildt, Baumgartner), É. Durkheim (1893) distinguishes the “organic solidarity” of a differentiated modern society from the “mechanical solidarity” of so-called primitive societies, in which the individ…
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Religion Past and Present
Materialism
(2,549 words)
[German Version] I. History of Religion – II. Philosophy – III. Theology
I. History of Religion In one of the earliest usages i…
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Religion Past and Present
Monism
(2,182 words)
[German Version] I. Religious Studies – II. Philosophy – III. Philosophy of Religion – IV. Dogmatics
I. Religious Studies In the study of religion, the term “monism” denotes concepts that relate the whole of reality to a single principle, and understand diversity and plurality as an all- unity. Monism, from the Gk μόνος/
monos (“alone, single”) is thus also in religious studies to be understood first in opposition to all dualistic concepts (Dualism); this was also the case when this concept was originally defined in the German Enlightenment (C…
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Religion Past and Present
Structuralism
(1,443 words)
[German Version]
I. The Term The term
structuralism is a collective name for an intellectual movement that shaped the human sciences and intellectual life in general, especially in France, in the 1950s and 1960s. Inspired by Ferdinand de Saussure’s linguistic studies, proponents of structuralism analyzed the enormous diversity of phenomena perceptible to the senses, seeking to define their common invariant structures. Just as the term
structure is derived from Latin
structura, a fabric of different but interrelated elements, the structuralists examined phenomena p…
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Religion Past and Present
Universalism and Particularism
(2,366 words)
[German Version]
I. Religious Studies In the classical phenomenology of religion, the universalism/particularism dichotomy denotes the difference between universal religions (Typology of religion) and so-called folk religions (Folk piety); the latter are “limited to a single people,” whereas the former “spread to include many peoples” (Mensching, 286f.) and proclaim a “universal” message, addressed in principle to all humanity. The universal religions are primarily those with founding figures: Buddhi…
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Religion Past and Present
Speculation
(1,498 words)
[German Version]
I. Religious Studies
1. The use of the term
speculation in religious studies is not divorced from its use in philosophy (see II below) and everyday language, but – especially in the phenomenology of religion – it has been used in a sense specific to religious studies, particularly to denote reflective, rationalizing, and systematizing deliberations regarding a particular religion, such as have arisen in certain historical situations (e.g. cultural upheavals) and various theoretical context…
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Religion Past and Present
Atheism
(4,492 words)
[German Version] I. Religious Studies – II. Church History – III. Philosophy of Religion – IV. Practical Theology – V. Missiology
I. Religious Studies
1. Preliminary Considerations. “Atheism” is a Lati-nized term, current since the end of the 16th century, meaning disbelief in God. It derives from Gk ἄθεός/
átheós (alpha privative), literally “without God.” This historical background with its specifically European connotation must be kept in mind in any …
Source:
Religion Past and Present
