Listing 1 - 10 of 44 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Globalization --- the Dharma --- Daisaku Ikeda --- Soka Gakkai --- globalization --- Buddhist humanism --- Japan --- September 11, 2001 --- japanese religions --- Japanese new religious movements --- Buddhism
Choose an application
Dojo --- magic --- exorcism --- Japan --- new religious sects --- occultism --- Japanese religions --- spirit possession --- Sukyo Mahikari (崇教真光) --- Japanese new religious movements --- okiyome --- gender --- women --- sexual karma --- Mahikari (真光)
Choose an application
spirituality --- Japanese new religions --- cultural psychology of belief --- Japan --- japanese religions --- Japanese new religious movements --- Sukyo Mahikari (崇教真光) --- ethnic identity --- japanese language --- purity --- okiyome (お浄め) --- Mahikari (真光)
Choose an application
Schism (from the Greek 'to split') refers to a group that breaks away from another, usually larger organisation and forms a new organisation. Though the term is typically confined to religious schisms, it can be extended to other kinds of breakaway groups. Because schisms emerge out of controversies, the term has negative connotations. Though they are an important component of many analyses, schisms in general have not been subjected to systematic analysis. This volume provides the first book-length study of religious schisms as a general phenomenon. Some chapters examine specific case studies while others provide surveys of the history of schisms within larger religious traditions, such as Islam and Buddhism. Other chapters are more theoretically focused. Examples are drawn from a wide variety of different traditions and geographical areas, from early Mediterranean Christianity to modern Japanese New Religions, and from the Jehovah's Witnesses to Neo-Pagans.
Religion --- Schism. --- Schisme --- History. --- Histoire --- Religious history --- Apostasy --- Heresy --- Sects --- Arts and Humanities --- religious schisms --- religious groups --- religious controversy --- religous traditions --- Islam --- Buddhism --- Mediterranean Christianity --- Japanese new religions --- Jehovah's Witnesses --- Neopaganism --- Japan --- Japanese new religious movements
Choose an application
Japan --- Religion --- Japan - Religion. --- Religion. --- religion --- Shinto --- Buddhism --- Confucianism --- Roman Catholicism --- spirituality --- WW II --- religious societies --- religious developments --- shintoism --- japanese religions --- japanese history --- history of Japan --- Japanese new religious movements --- Soka Gakkai (創価学会)
Choose an application
Choose an application
Choose an application
eschatology --- Japanese Buddhism --- Nichiren --- Soka Gakkai --- World War II --- Rissho Ankoku Ron --- Soka Gakkai membership --- the United States --- Nichiren Shoshu --- secularity --- politics --- diplomacy --- China --- Toda Josei --- Japan --- japanese religions --- Japanese new religious movements
Choose an application
religious movement --- the Aum Affair --- the anti-cult movement in Japan --- the media --- prophecy --- Aum Shinrikyo (オウム真理教) --- Shoko Asahara (麻原彰晃) --- Japanese new religious movements --- sarin --- Sarin gas attack --- Japan
Choose an application
Dans toute l'Europe, et au-delà, on a assisté ces dernières années à un grand débat sur les sectes, leur nature, leur nombre, leur influence, leur rôle. Des événements tragiques comme les suicides collectifs ont confirmé dans leurs convictions ceux qui pensent que les sectes sont un fléau pour la société qui les tolère et pour les individus qui s'y engagent. D'autres, au contraire, mettent en garde contre la nouvelle " chasse aux sorcières " qu'on risque de déclencher et en appellent au respect du droit à la liberté religieuse. Ne faut-il pas compléter les analyses classiques de Max Weber et d'Ernst Troeltsch, qui distinguent entre le type " Église " et le type " Secte " ? Plusieurs études sur des groupes controversés (le tristement célèbre Ordre du Temple Solaire, les Témoins de Jéhovah, la Soka Gakkaï, les Loubavitch... ou des mouvances accusées de dérives sectaires) illustrent les évolutions contrastées du paysage religieux aujourd'hui. On assiste d'ailleurs à une mondialisation de ces phénomènes. Les auteurs reviennent longuement sur le débat de société autour des sectes, sur leur nocivité réelle ou supposée, sur leur stigmatisation légitime ou irraisonnée dans les médias et l'opinion publique. Les sectes interrogent la laïcité de l'Etat et le droit : entrent-elles dans le droit commun des religions ou faut-il créer une législation " anti-sectes " spécifique ? Toutes ces questions très actuelles sont abordées dans un langage clair et précis par des spécialistes européens, sous la direction de Françoise Champion et Martine Cohen
Sects --- Sectes --- Social aspects --- Political aspects --- History --- Public opinion --- Aspect social --- Aspect politique --- Histoire --- Opinion publique --- Sects. --- Religion and politics. --- History. --- Europe --- sectes --- suicides collectifs --- la société --- Max Weber --- Ernst Troeltsch --- législation 'anti-sectes' --- Soka Gakkai (創価学会) --- Japanese new religious movements --- Japan --- nouveaux mouvements religieux japonais --- Japon
Listing 1 - 10 of 44 | << page >> |
Sort by
|