Religious Worldview Essay

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Pages: 3

Worldview' refers to a common concept of reality shared by a particular group of people, usually referred to as a culture or an ethnic group. There is some commonality in our basic experience of the world, of other people, and of life-events we share in common. There is also that variation of individual experience, of interpretation of that experience and of behavior based on knowledge gained from that experience (Jenkins, 1999). There exists among people today a wide variety of worldviews. There are religious worldviews, political worldviews, and economic worldviews . . . the list goes on and on. And all of these worldviews can be examined in a variety of ways. One important consideration when relating worldviews to the development of a culture is the interwoven nature of worldviews, leadership, motive, power, and control. An individual's worldview can only be deemed authentic and valid if it is a 'true' belief vs. an opinion or mechanism that facilitates the manipulation of people or circumstances with selfish or iniquitous intent. …show more content…
Humanism seeks to do that which is right for the individual. Humanism was successfully, albeit temporarily, promoted as that which was good for the masses. However, the relatively recent, failed experiment with Communism in the now defunct Soviet Union proved that only a few individuals were reaping the lion's share of the rewards in that corrupt political system. This was most accurately revealed by the two classes into which that society was eventually divided: the upper class made up of wealthy political and military leaders, and the lower class made up of the poor, working class. The Russian Federation, born out of the break-up of the Soviet Union, continues to struggle as it seeks to rebuild its economy, political leadership and culture around an immature form of