Fields of Blood: Religion and the History of Violence by Karen Armstrong, and: Did God Really Command Genocide? Coming to Grips with the Justice of God by Paul Copan and Matthew Flannagan (review)

Q3 Social Sciences Genocide Studies International Pub Date : 2018-04-07 DOI:10.3138/GSI.11.2.10
S. Jacobs
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Abstract

In the academic study of religion, on occasion, one studies what has come to be known as ‘‘apologetics,’’ that is, the defense and proof of religious doctrines through systematic arguments and discourses. Though it has a long history, we in the West most often associate it with various iterations of Christianity, yet apologetic works can also be found substantively in Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and other such expressions of religion. The rationale of such works has a twofold purpose: to ‘‘make sense’’ (i.e., a certain degree of rationalism) to the community of adherents to continue their allegiance, and to defend the faithful from attacks by outsiders who regard a given religion and religious community as a threat to the stability and power structure of a given nation-state. Focusing specifically on the question of genocide in the two texts examined below, one is reminded of the comment by Henry Huttenbach, Professor in the History Department of the City College of the City University of New York:
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凯伦·阿姆斯特朗的《血的田野:宗教与暴力史》,以及:上帝真的指挥了种族灭绝吗?保罗·科潘和马修·弗兰纳根的《抓住上帝的正义》(评论)
在宗教的学术研究中,有时会研究所谓的“波罗吉主义”,即通过系统的争论和论述来捍卫和证明宗教教义。尽管它有着悠久的历史,但我们西方人最常将其与基督教的各种迭代联系在一起,但在佛教、印度教、伊斯兰教、犹太教和其他此类宗教表达中也可以找到道歉作品。这类作品的基本原理有两个目的:对信徒群体“有意义”(即一定程度的理性主义),以继续他们的忠诚,并保护信徒免受外界的攻击,因为外界认为特定的宗教和宗教群体对特定民族国家的稳定和权力结构构成威胁。在下面审查的两个文本中,特别关注种族灭绝问题,让人想起纽约城市大学城市学院历史系教授Henry Huttenbach的评论:
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来源期刊
Genocide Studies International
Genocide Studies International POLITICAL SCIENCE-
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
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