Religion is an expresssion of the human need to understand our place in the order of things.
Religion is an expresssion of the human need to understand our place in the order of things.
And it doesn't usefully differentiate it from, say, existentialism.I wouldn't call that an accurate or useful definition of religion. The mere existence of atheists and the generally non-religious invalidates any claim of a "need" in the strict sense. More importantly, while this describes one possible source of religion, it does not define religion itself.
I think it defines all religions: an expression of a need. It allows for multiple expressions of that need as is fititng given the multi-cultural nature of human society. It allows for atheism as a different expression also. Its usefulness is in that it addresses why all the various specifics of a religiion are there.I wouldn't call that an accurate or useful definition of religion. The mere existence of atheists and the generally non-religious invalidates any claim of a "need" in the strict sense. More importantly, while this describes one possible source of religion, it does not define religion itself.
And why is differentiation so important at such a high level? Existentialismis a way of organizing ones place in the universe. So is Catholicism. As expressions they are not the same, but their purpose is the same.And it doesn't usefully differentiate it from, say, existentialism.
To what extent are readings of Islamic philosophers/theologians included in your personal canon of theology with which you do your work? If any such generalization can be made, how does your discipline approach Islamic philosophy/theology?
Religion is an expresssion of the human need to understand our place in the order of things.
Also, could you give the title of the book you cited the Lindberg quote from? Thanks.
And why is differentiation so important at such a high level? Existentialismis a way of organizing ones place in the universe. So is Catholicism. As expressions they are not the same, but their purpose is the same.
I don't think it's possible. There is probably no definition of "religion" that includes everything we think of as a religion or that excludes everything we think isn't a religion. As a rule of thumb I would say that a religion is a sociological phenomenon that may include at least some of:
(1) A social organisation.
(2) A set of commonly believed doctrines.
(3) Liturgy.
(4) A moral code.
(5) Mysticism
I think those are the most significant elements but of course there are plenty of religions that don't have them all, and there are probably some that have none. At the risk of sounding very pretentious, I would say that what Wittgenstein said about "games" is true of "religions" - you can't really define them, but you know them when you see them.
That may be a feature that all religions have, but I agree with Miles Teg and Dachs that it can't be a definition of religion, because it is too wide. You might say that much of science is an expression of the same need, but you wouldn't call science "religion". And the same is true of much of philosophy.
In this case, it seems to me that there are three possible claims here:
(1) Religion came about as a result of human beings trying to understand their place in the order of things. (A historical claim.)
(2) Religion does, as a matter of fact, function as an expression of human beings' desire to understand their place in the order of things. (A functional claim.)
(3) Religion is (definitionally) the expression of human beings' desire to understand their place in the order of things. (A definitional claim.)
All of these are tendentious if you take them as universally true. (1) seems plausible, but has the problem that we don't really know how most religions began, let alone how religion itself began. It could have begun for other reasons - perhaps people believed in spirits initially as an explanation for natural phenomena, and only subsequently related themselves to the worldview this generated. So we're just speculating here. (2) is also plausible and surely true in many cases. However, it is surely not true of every single religious person, at least. (3) is the most tendentious and surely false, because, as we have said, there are other phenomena that satisfy this description but which we would not generally be inclined to call "religions". But you might build upon this idea to produce a more plausible definition. You might, for example, regard this as the "genus" of religion but then narrow it down further to produce its "species". For example: religion is (=def.) an expression of our need to understand our place in the order of things, which... (insert specifying clause here).
Our approaches to defining religion are different. Your bottom up appraoch which lists those elements typically found in religions, as you said, has it problems in that it cannot be comprehensive nor complete. It falls short because it winds up being "too narrow". As you also said, my defintion goes long and is "too broad to be useful". Certainly "an expression of a need" would include many non religious answers.
The red text that you used to discredit my appraoch, BTW, can be applied to just about everything that is formally defined. The fact that there are exceptions does not necessarily diminish the value of the rule.
You raise another question. Is religion more a thing or is it more a function? Is it primarily a set of activities and beliefs (Catholicism means this and this; Hinduism means this and this, without common context) or is it primarily different manifestations of a single principle. Where you place religion on that slider makes a huge difference in how one sees it.
Perhaps, but I might well be able to work those other aspects into that broad statement.It's also too narrow. It only encompasses one aspect of religion. This aspect is part of things that don't seem to religions, but at the same time there are many major factors that aren't listed or implied in your statement.
I agree; when a definition no longer serves us well it should be changed. Religion is a complex thing and collecting all the pieces in a single basket is difficult. It calls for multiple parts to address different aspects of it.It depends on the usefulness of the rule, and how categorical it is. Mammals give birth live young, platypuses are mammals, and lay eggs. The reason we keep the live birth rule is because
1. It's only one aspect of the rule. Technically, the rule about mammals could be defined as "descendants of the same proto-mammal carrying a requisite number of similarities to the modern form".
2. The exception is small. Platypuses and echidnas form a small exception to the rule. If egg-bearing mammals were more widespread and numerous, the definition would be changed.
Which common principles do you think fit best?Obviously it's both. Different manifestations of a few common principles, which can be categorized based on differing practices and beliefs.
Perhaps, but I might well be able to work those other aspects into that broad statement.
I agree; when a definition no longer serves us well it should be changed. Religion is a complex thing and collecting all the pieces in a single basket is difficult. It calls for multiple parts to address different aspects of it.
Which common principles do you think fit best?
Do the differing practices and beliefs determine the common principles (as you seem to state) or do the principles shape the practices and beliefs? Is the flow up or down?
I would say that all religion is an expression of the human need to understand and organize one's world and typically manifests some or all of the following....blah blah blah. In parallel to that there are non religious expressions of the same need that have a different set of traits....In order to do that, I think you would need to make a statement so broad that it could be applied to nearly anything. I mean, your statement is too narrow to really define religion, but it also includes philosophy and science. In order to get a comprehensive single statement, we would have to magnify that problem by several orders of magnitude.
Not bad. I might change "beyond" to "out of reach" of science. And do we want to add "still accessible"?I think we need to define principles to continue this discussion productively. Ultimately the core belief of all religions is that their is something that is beyond science. Not necessarily a belief that this thing is not supported by evidence, or that it's not a real person/place/energy, but the belief that it does not conform to the ordinary laws of the universe.
This is a decent definition of belief, and can be near universally agreed on.
Religion: bald guys and/or silly head gear
(I'm not sure if that definition includes the Mormons, so it may not be complete either)
Why have atheists been the minority throughout history? Or am I wrong, has there been a society somewhere that atheism was the norm?
Where can I get (or do you know) a figure for how what percentage of individuals aren't of the same religion as their parents?