This paper argues that religious violence can be interpreted as resulting from the disproportion between the transcendent, elusive character of the divine and the need of a religious community for identity. This explains why the divine has to be contained in finite, human categories. Inevitably, these categories mark the distinction between inclusion and exclusion, as well as between orthodoxy and heresy. Hence, religious violence can be explained as a problematic reaction to the threat of the loss of religious identity. Against this background, the final section explores how this reaction can be averted. Paradoxically, the very absoluteness of God and of religious truth that critics of religion often see as monotheism’s greatest weakness b...
The study was set to investigate the nature and effects of religious violence along with the governm...
This paper challenges conventional views of violent religious extremism, particularly those that emp...
While one of the arguments against religious belief relates to its apparent irrationality, it can be...
This paper argues that religious violence can be interpreted as resulting from the disproportion bet...
The starting point is that there is a structural, although not necessary link between religion and t...
he history of religion has been a seriously blood-bathed one. It reveals the intense power, weight, ...
Religious violence is a function of deep philosophical and psychological belief-behavior. This artic...
Religion and violence have been the subject of numerous discussions. One side considers that religio...
There's no gainsaying that the negative dimensions and the influence of various religions on humanit...
Religious believers claim their religions are peaceful and genuine believers are peacekeepers and pe...
The recent debate on the relation between certain religious traditions and violence has offered us m...
Our world witnesses life-denying and destructive tendencies of violence. In the following pages the ...
To question the links between violence and religion is not equivalent to denying that they exist. Su...
The Legitimacy and Effectiveness of Law & Governance in a World of Multilevel Jurisdiction
The idea that religion has a dangerous tendency to promote violence is part of the conventional wisd...
The study was set to investigate the nature and effects of religious violence along with the governm...
This paper challenges conventional views of violent religious extremism, particularly those that emp...
While one of the arguments against religious belief relates to its apparent irrationality, it can be...
This paper argues that religious violence can be interpreted as resulting from the disproportion bet...
The starting point is that there is a structural, although not necessary link between religion and t...
he history of religion has been a seriously blood-bathed one. It reveals the intense power, weight, ...
Religious violence is a function of deep philosophical and psychological belief-behavior. This artic...
Religion and violence have been the subject of numerous discussions. One side considers that religio...
There's no gainsaying that the negative dimensions and the influence of various religions on humanit...
Religious believers claim their religions are peaceful and genuine believers are peacekeepers and pe...
The recent debate on the relation between certain religious traditions and violence has offered us m...
Our world witnesses life-denying and destructive tendencies of violence. In the following pages the ...
To question the links between violence and religion is not equivalent to denying that they exist. Su...
The Legitimacy and Effectiveness of Law & Governance in a World of Multilevel Jurisdiction
The idea that religion has a dangerous tendency to promote violence is part of the conventional wisd...
The study was set to investigate the nature and effects of religious violence along with the governm...
This paper challenges conventional views of violent religious extremism, particularly those that emp...
While one of the arguments against religious belief relates to its apparent irrationality, it can be...