Religious values reflect the beliefs and practices which a religious adherent partakes in. Most values originate from sacred texts of each respective religion. They can also originate from members of the religion. Various aspects of the significance of religious values have been considered with respect to novels, their relevance to a particular religious group (the Jains for instance or Latin Americans), and in relation to human society.
Attributes | Values |
---|
sameAs
| |
wasDerivedFrom
| |
dbpedia-owl:abstract
| - Religious values reflect the beliefs and practices which a religious adherent partakes in. Most values originate from sacred texts of each respective religion. They can also originate from members of the religion. Members of particular religions are considered to be a prime embodiment of the particular religion’s values, such as leaders or adherents of a religion who strictly abide by its rules. Each religion has similar and differing values. Being religious does not indicate that certain religions are opposed to particular attitudes or encourage them. These values are also evident in secular society as it shares similarities. Various aspects of the significance of religious values have been considered with respect to novels, their relevance to a particular religious group (the Jains for instance or Latin Americans), and in relation to human society. Religions influence areas of living in society such a how they treat money. Money is used more ethically by religious adherents than those who are not. Care of the environment is also a religious moral based on values of creation. There are issues in society such as abortion which religious values impact as well. An adherent’s attitudes on homosexuality are also affected by religious values. If divorce is taken as a path in marriage or not is affected by how religious the individuals are. Even an adherents consumer behaviour can be shaped by their religion.
|
dbpedia-owl:thumbnail
| |
dbpedia-owl:wikiPageExternalLink
| |
dbpedia-owl:wikiPageID
| |
dbpedia-owl:wikiPageRevisionID
| |
dbpprop:title
| |
comment
| - Religious values reflect the beliefs and practices which a religious adherent partakes in. Most values originate from sacred texts of each respective religion. They can also originate from members of the religion. Various aspects of the significance of religious values have been considered with respect to novels, their relevance to a particular religious group (the Jains for instance or Latin Americans), and in relation to human society.
|
label
| |
dbpprop:wikiPageUsesTemplate
| |
described by
| |
topic
| |
name
| |
depiction
| |
dbpprop:group
| |
http://purl.org/li...ics/gold/hypernym
| |
Subject
| |
is primary topic of
| |
dbpprop:state
| |
dbpprop:list
| - * Autonomy
* Axiology
* Belief
* Conscience
* Consent
* Equality
* Care
* Free will
* Good and evil
** Good
** Evil
* Happiness
* Ideal
* Immorality
* Justice
* Liberty
* Morality
* Norm
* Freedom
* Principles
* Suffering or Pain
* Stewardship
* Sympathy
* Trust
* Value
* Virtue
* World view
* Wrong
* full index...
- * Laozi
* Socrates
* Plato
* Aristotle
* Diogenes
* Valluvar
* Cicero
* Confucius
* Augustine of Hippo
* Mencius
* Mozi
* Xunzi
* Thomas Aquinas
* Baruch Spinoza
* David Hume
* Immanuel Kant
* Georg W. F. Hegel
* Arthur Schopenhauer
* Jeremy Bentham
* John Stuart Mill
* Søren Kierkegaard
* Henry Sidgwick
* Friedrich Nietzsche
* G. E. Moore
* Karl Barth
* Paul Tillich
* Dietrich Bonhoeffer
* Philippa Foot
* John Rawls
* John Dewey
* Bernard Williams
* J. L. Mackie
* G. E. M. Anscombe
* William Frankena
* Alasdair MacIntyre
* R. M. Hare
* Peter Singer
* Derek Parfit
* Thomas Nagel
* Robert Merrihew Adams
* Charles Taylor
* Joxe Azurmendi
* Christine Korsgaard
* Martha Nussbaum
* more...
- * Christian ethics
* Descriptive ethics
* Ethics in religion
* Evolutionary ethics
* Feminist ethics
* History of ethics
* Ideology
* Islamic ethics
* Jewish ethics
* Moral psychology
* Normative ethics
* Philosophy of law
* Political philosophy
* Population ethics
* Social philosophy
- * Cognitivism
** Moral realism
*** Ethical naturalism
*** Ethical non-naturalism
** Ethical subjectivism
*** Ideal observer theory
*** Divine command theory
** Error theory
* Non-cognitivism
** Emotivism
** Quasi-realism
** Universal prescriptivism
* Moral universalism
** Value monism
** Value pluralism
* Moral relativism
* Moral nihilism
* Empiricism
* Moral rationalism
* Ethical intuitionism
* Moral skepticism
- * Bioethics
* Business ethics
* Discourse ethics
* Engineering ethics
* Environmental ethics
* Legal ethics
* Machine ethics
* Media ethics
* Medical ethics
* Nursing ethics
* Professional ethics
* Sexual ethics
* Ethics of eating meat
* Ethics of technology
- * Casuistry
* Consequentialism
* Deontology
** Kantian ethics
* Ethics of care
* Existentialist ethics
* Meta-ethics
* Particularism
* Pragmatic ethics
* Role ethics
* Virtue ethics
|
dbpedia-owl:wikiPageLength
| |
dbpedia-owl:wikiPageWikiLink
| |