:: Volume 17, Issue 64 (spring 2021) ::
2021, 17(64): 149-170 Back to browse issues page
An Explanation of the Concept of Sacred and Non-Sacred in Functional and Phenomenological Studies of Religion
Alireza Khajehgir 1, Susan Izadi Dastnayi2
1- Assistant professo University of Shahrekord
2- AM University of Shahrekord
Abstract:   (1747 Views)
The concept of sacred is one of the most widely used concepts among theorists of religious phenomenology and functionalism in the analysis of the roots and definition of religion based on the distinction between sacred and non-sacred. The main issue of research in this paper, with a descriptive-analytical method, is to examine the position, meaning and application of the concepts of sacred and non-sacred in the theology of these two schools with emphasis on the views of Durkheim, Otto and Eliade. The research findings show that in Durkheim's functionalism, the truth of religion is not belief in a supernatural god, but he considers the separation of the sacred from the non-sacred as the functions of society; But in Otto's phenomenology, the essence of religion is an experience of the sacred, which is uniquely experienced in a mysterious and terrifying way for every human being and has an indescribable transcendent quality. On the other hand, the process of religious symbolism and dialectics of the sacred is one of the most important concepts which has been considered in the phenomenology of the Eliade.
Keywords
Sacred, Non-Sacred, Phenomenology, Religion, Functionalism.

 
Full-Text [PDF 339 kb]   (359 Downloads)    
Type of Study: Research | Subject: Special
Received: 2020/11/26 | Accepted: 2020/04/13 | Published: 2021/07/14 | ePublished: 2021/07/14


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Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Rights and permissions
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Volume 17, Issue 64 (spring 2021) Back to browse issues page