- The spread of Christianity on Africans, Asians and Native Americans
- Christianity spread all over the world, bu how it would be accepted would be determined by how long the religion served people.
- Islam began o grow and spread gaining millions of followers all over the globe, it remains a competing religion with Christianity.
- it seems that the religion broke into sections as people are rebelling against it. And as history shows us whenever people are not happy with a portion of their lives or religion they ry to make a change and religion was faced with just that.
- While Christianity was supposed to provide some level of hope and belief in something greater that would deliver people from their hellish lives and provide a better life.
- Religion in the wrong hands can be dangerous if people don't learn it, read it, and apply it for themselves
- The Africans, Native Americans and Asians faced just that.
- They dealt with the misuse and misrepresentation of what God commanded to be morally good.
world history intro. ch.1 and 2
Saturday, July 18, 2015
World History ch. 13, 14, 15
ch. 16, 17, 18
- Atlantic Slave Trade was an evil and cruel entity. It devastated and exploited many lands such as Africa. African people were enslaved and treated less than human. Africans were bought and sold as a piece of property. They were intimidated, whipped and killed all in the name of God. the Europeans misused Christianity for their own selfish gain and profit.
- They used what philosophers called the Divine Command Theory. The theory states that it "is a meta ethical theory proposes that an action's status as morally good is equivalent to whatever it is commanded by God. The theory asserts that what is normal is determined by whatever God commands and that to be normal is to follow the commands,"( www.wikipedia.com). The people brain washed and whipped and beaten into submission in efforts to advance what is known today as the United states and without enough recognition. It is very sad that our country was built on the very backs of those the Europeans despise. And although they have been freed African Americans, Native Americans and Asian Americans continue to be used and mistreated still today.
- The economy thrives on sweat shops in other countries it's just another form of cheap manual labor mostly from the Asian Continent
- The Native Americans at least were given some form of a reparation when they were given their Indian Reservations which are restricted in some ways from law
- The African American although free still face discrimination, prejudice and racism in several forms
- The United States like most countries are only going to admit to fault and beg their pardon if the group of people live in a country that harbors a natural resource hat we use daily and that we import to keep our economy running
ch. 20 and ch.21
The depression was a sad, sad time in American History. People lost their jobs, the banks were not backed so people lost their entire savings, and women had to enter the work force doing jobs men would normally do. The unemployment rate was at an all time high, lots of families turned to food banks for help. This economic downturn actually catepolted the market back into a boom when the President Roosevelt created the ABC programs in efforts to keep a revolution from happening as well as stabilizing the country with social programs.
Hitler and the Nazi's set out to erdaicate the Jewish people in efforts to create a more supreme race of people (blond hair and blue eyed) race . His dictatorship led to the massacre of many people and caused many families to flee Munich, Germany in search of peace, life and pursuit of happiness.
Tuesday, June 16, 2015
June 16, 2015
Strayer says, " Submission to Allah("Muslim" means "one who submits") was the primary obligation of believers and the means of achieving a God-conscious life in this world and a place in paradise after death. According to the Quran, however, submission was not merely an individual or a spiritual act, for it involved the creation of a whole new society. Over again, the Quran denounced the prevailing social practices of an increasingly prosperous Mecca: the hoarding of wealth, the exploitation of the poor, the changing of high rates of interest on loans, corrupt business deals, the abuse of women, and the neglect of widows and orphans. Like the Jewish prophets of the Old Testament, the Quran demanded social justice and laid out a prescription for its implementation. It sought a return to the older values of Arab tribal life--solidarity, equality, concern for the poor--which had been underminded, particularly in Mecca, by growing wealth and commercialism,"(415/416). Reminds me of the story in Christianity there was similar things happening and the tax collector was collecting taxes and their were people in the temple stealing and gambling and God destroyed the Temple. There seems to be some symmetry here with the stories even though the religious figures differ. Both Messengers attempt to send messages in similar styles. And when I think about Jesus Christ and my submission to HIM im supposed to do the same thing. Put my trust in God and rely on his blessings. We use words like Jesus is my rock, my salvation, my strongtower, my keeper my Deliverer etc. Religion seems to be what people need and look to for motivation to enter into a better or different life. I can relate because it was the catalyst for me.
Strayer shows on page 527 how this line, "One possibility, apparently considered by the Great Khan Ogodei (ERG-uh-day) in the 1230s, was to exterminate everyone in northern China and turn the country into pastureland for Mongol herds," this guy sounds like the Dictator Adolf Hitler of Germany seeking to destroy all Jewish people. I guess Genocide was not unfamiliar to most dictator' and men of conquest and acquisition.
Strayer says, " Submission to Allah("Muslim" means "one who submits") was the primary obligation of believers and the means of achieving a God-conscious life in this world and a place in paradise after death. According to the Quran, however, submission was not merely an individual or a spiritual act, for it involved the creation of a whole new society. Over again, the Quran denounced the prevailing social practices of an increasingly prosperous Mecca: the hoarding of wealth, the exploitation of the poor, the changing of high rates of interest on loans, corrupt business deals, the abuse of women, and the neglect of widows and orphans. Like the Jewish prophets of the Old Testament, the Quran demanded social justice and laid out a prescription for its implementation. It sought a return to the older values of Arab tribal life--solidarity, equality, concern for the poor--which had been underminded, particularly in Mecca, by growing wealth and commercialism,"(415/416). Reminds me of the story in Christianity there was similar things happening and the tax collector was collecting taxes and their were people in the temple stealing and gambling and God destroyed the Temple. There seems to be some symmetry here with the stories even though the religious figures differ. Both Messengers attempt to send messages in similar styles. And when I think about Jesus Christ and my submission to HIM im supposed to do the same thing. Put my trust in God and rely on his blessings. We use words like Jesus is my rock, my salvation, my strongtower, my keeper my Deliverer etc. Religion seems to be what people need and look to for motivation to enter into a better or different life. I can relate because it was the catalyst for me.
Strayer shows on page 527 how this line, "One possibility, apparently considered by the Great Khan Ogodei (ERG-uh-day) in the 1230s, was to exterminate everyone in northern China and turn the country into pastureland for Mongol herds," this guy sounds like the Dictator Adolf Hitler of Germany seeking to destroy all Jewish people. I guess Genocide was not unfamiliar to most dictator' and men of conquest and acquisition.
Monday, June 1, 2015
ch. 3,4 and 5
When reading ch. 3 I was reminded how for centuries it seems countries or cultures who do things with a certain flair or style and have success with the invention or tool have "biters" meaning followers. Like when the book talked about how the Classical Greeks took what ancient Greeks and Persia did but because the classical Greeks had more class or status to them it was deemed better. Kinda like how the book talks about modern day philosiphers believe that Western civilization closely replicates Classical Greece Era with the way politics are ran and how social class is structured. Especially with how there are similar inequalities within the people with status.
When looking back at chapter 4 about the different religions I was given a more wholistic approach/view of how Confucinism came into play. I took World religions two sememsters ago and we studied a lot of religions from Zoraster religion, confucianism, Buddhism, Hinduism, Muslim and Daoism. And from what I gather Confucianism was supposed to restore the inequalities of china since it focused on respecting and valuing the the old people. I learned so much about them all, but still found it hard to believe some of their creation stories because they all seemed to tie back into Christianity. Their was the story of how a man and a woman never entered each other to create all of man kind, but the man had a large Penis and it drug the grown and the female had a large clitoris and it drug the grown and these long grooves or ditches in the grown exist and the people of that religion/culture truly believe that is how life was created.
Sometimes I think religion is just supposed to supply a level of hope or relief from all of life's stressors and inequalities. Like Daoism which according to the book, "invited people to withdraw from the world of political and social activism, to disengage from the public life so important to confucius, and to align themselves with the way of nature. It meant simplicity in living small self-sufficient communities, limited government, and the abandonement of education and active efforts at self- improvement. Give up learning." This differs from the Hinduism model of education and learning is what makes you closer to God. Knowledge is everything.
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
sade's perception of ways of the world; intro. ch1. ch.2
When reading the introduction to Ways of the World I was reminded of how in line the history of man is with Christianity. The section titled, "The Globalization of Humankind," had a sentence that read Today, every significant landmass on earth is occupied by human beings, but it was not always so. A mere half million years ago our species did not exist, and only 100,000 years ago that species was limited to Africa and numbered, some scholars believe, fewer than 10,000 individuals" (pg.4). This particular line made me think of the story of Noah and the Ark from the Bible or Torah. Where God rid the Earth of all mankind except 2 of every animal and Noah's family were left to replenish the earth.
I also was very intrigued by our usage of the word "Paleo diet" and how our generation tries to portray it as if it's all the new rave and craze when really we took it from Paleolithic era way of life. But it's not really accurate because Paleolithic era the people really were hunter gatherers and only took what they could eat immediately. The book states, "The word "Paleolithic" literally means the "old stone age," but it refers more generally to a food-collecting or gathering and hunting way of life, before agriculture allowed people to grow food or raise animals deliberately." I thought it was very in line with American culture where we tend to assume the creation of undocumented or other people's unpatened ideas and claim them as our own, just like what happens when a country or civilization is colonized. Because when we say Paleo Diet we are really talking about extremely low carb to zero carbs or caveman diet.
The section titled "The Revolution of Farming and Herding" made me realize how much of takers of the land we are. While it was a great "first" in Human history to accomplish farming and raising animals for food, we also became abusers of the land we so greatly love. The book poses the question, "What changes to human life did this new technology bring with it?" and it greatly answer's it in section titled, "The Turning Point of Civilization." The quote, "They gave rise to empires of increasing size, to enduring cultural and religious traditions, to new technologies, to sharper class and gender inequalities, to new conceptions of masculinity and femininity, and to large-scale warfare, (pg.6)." There have been many great advancements with technology, but also great ruin due to corrupt minds. How did we move from a society that loved and value women to then making them foot stools for men.
We have so much to be thankful for because the first inventors from the Paleolithic Era have paved the way for greater and greater Technology for us today. I noticed it talked alot about how people who used tools made of stone where somehow less human or less intelligent than those who used metals tools, but I disagree completely. We piggy backed off of their ideas completely and their initial creation gave birth to new and improved forms of the same tool, but made for more ease and comfort.
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