Bahai Library Online

Bibliography: #JSZ93RLY

key JSZ93RLY
title Perception of Religious “Other” and the Quality of Its Narration in the Cultural Context of Iran
author Alizadeh, Sahar; Sadeghi, Alireza; Adib, Yousef; Ghaderi, Mostafa
item typeJournal article
publication year2023
date2023
publication titleJournal of Philosophical Investigations
DOIhttp//doi.org/10.22034/JPIUT.2022.51854.3230
abstract noteHuman cultural vision in religious rituals and ceremonies of different religions, denominations and sects is of such a difference that this difference sometimes puts them in complete contradiction with each other. Apparently, every religion speaks of the eternal principles that must be followed by that religion’s followers and seeks to raise reasons of the veracity of its own claims as well as the refutation of the claims of other religions in order to prove its own supremacy in the face of the inferiority of the other religions. Today, man needs to have an interpretation and perspective of these diversities and to offer a judgement of their veracity, rightness or deviance to make the best choice in rational terms. Referring to the ideas of thinkers is one of the methods that can help the humans to identify or mitigate these challenges. Thus, this study aims at assaying the perception of religious other from the point of view of the human scientists. The approach of this research is based on the qualitative method focusing on thematic analysis, data collection through semi-structured interviews as well as the analysis of the findings based on the stages of the thematic analysis. The research field is constituted by the professors of the universities of Tehran city. Sampling process continued in a purposeful manner among the professors of philosophy and sociology up to 8 cases until the theoretical saturation. The results of the research show that religious other within Iranian cultural context includes eight sub themes: Sunni, Zoroastrians, Christians, Jews, Mandaeans, Yarsans, Derwishes and Baha’is. Note that the authors argue for tolerance while referring to "revealed" and "unrevealed" religions, referring to theses written in Islamic Republic Iran's universities, and tending to explain away the attraction of the Bahá'í Faith.
pages285-301
issue41
volume16
languageEnglish
manual tagsIRAN; MINORITIES; ISLAM; OTHERING

browse all, summary view divider browse all, detaled view

home divider sitemap divider series divider chronology
search:   author divider title divider date divider tags
adv. search divider languages divider inventory
bibliography divider abbreviations divider links
about divider contact divider RSS divider new
smaller fontbigger font