RELI 4400/6400. The History of Religions. 3 hours.
Oasis Title: HIST OF REL
Prerequisite: Junior or senior standing or permission of department.
This course serves as an introduction into the actual study of religion/religions. We will place specific religious traditions medieval monastic Catholicism, Japanese Zen Buddhism, Indian village Hinduism, Modern American Protestantism, and medieval Islamic Sufism in the light of the ideas and theories of religious scholars.
Course Objectives:
(1) To develop the reading, writing, speaking, and thinking skills necessary for the critical study of religion.
(2) To introduce the basic elements of several of the worlds religious systems.
(3) To demonstrate the manner in which humans throughout the world have historically combined a variety of strategies, such as devotion, philosophy, ritual, meditation, art, and ethics, to create specific ways of living lives of well being.
(4) To stimulate comparison of the ideas, practices, beliefs, and quotidian and ultimate concerns of diverse cultures.
Course Outline:
I. Dichotomous terms
II. Definitions revisited
III. Theorists
Émile Durkheim
J.Z. Smith
Mark C. Taylor
Immanuel Kant
René Descartes
Rudolf Otto
Ludwig Feuerbach
Paul Tillich
Sigmund Freud
Geraardus van der Leeuw
Ludwig Wittgenstein
Clifford Geertz
IV. The Wages of Action
Hinduism
V. The Principles and Practice of Zen
Buddhism
The Empty Mirror
VI. Christianity
The Autobiography of St. Thérèse of Lisieux
Emmanuel Levinas
VII. Symbol and language
Ludwig Wittgenstein, from Philosophical Investigations: 1-38
Geddes MacGregor, "Paradox in Religious Language;" "Symbol and Reality"
VIII. Islam: Sufism
Nasradin
University Honor Code and Academic Honesty Policy
All academic work must meet the standards contained in the document titled A Culture of Honesty. All students are responsible for informing themselves about those standards before performing any academic work.
Nature and Limits of the Course Syllabus
The course syllabus is a general plan for the course. Changes and variations, announced to the class by the instructor, may be necessary.