Chapters 1-7: Period 2 Flashcards
How did religions help strengthen political, economic, and cultural ties within societies?
As states and empires increased in size and contacts between regions multiplied, religious and cultural systems were transformed. Religions
and belief systems provided a bond among the people and an ethical code to live by.
These shared beliefs also influenced and reinforced
political, economic and occupational stratification. Religious and political authority often merged as rulers, some considered divine, used religion,
along with military and legal structures, to justify their rule and ensure its continuation.
Religions and belief systems could also generate conflict, partly because beliefs and practices varied greatly within and among
societies.
How did religions promote a sense of unity?
Codifications and further developments of existing religious traditions
provided a bond among the people and an ethical code to live by.
What are the characteristics and core teachings of Judaism?
Secular religion that focused on worldly benefits, such as prosperity, material goods and successes.
· Through a covenant with God, followers of Judaism who abided by “the Law”, were promised deliverance
· There were two different types of Jews: the original Jews, who believed in the promise of deliverance from God known as a covenant, and Jesus’s followers, who believe that God’s grace is not guaranteed and is based on God’s will.
What are the characteristics and core teachings of Hinduism?
· Believed in a caste system, which states that people’s place in society is predetermined and unmovable
· Brahmans, or priests of the highest caste, were considered to garner the most respect
· Enforced traditions, such as the sanctity of cows and the belief that a widow should be burned on her husbands funeral pyre (sati)
What is a “universal religion?” Where did universal religions exist by 600 CE?
New belief systems and cultural traditions emerged and spread, often asserting universal truths.
What are the characteristics and core teachings of Buddhism?
Through meditation, prayer, and dietary practices, people can reach nirvana and end the cycle of reincarnation
o If nirvana is not achieved, the soul is reborn (reincarnation)
· Two offshoots of Buddhism:
o Theravada Buddhism: Buddhism influenced by Indian moral disciplines where the soul can advance to nirvana through tiny increments, which can transcend lifetimes
o Mahayana Buddhism: Buddhism influenced by Chinese principles, where the soul could reach nirvana in one single lifetime
What are the characteristics and core teachings of Confucianism?
· Man is born good.
· World is morally neutral - i.e. the world does not decide on the consequences of man’s actions.
· Human nature is inherently good, therefore people should have political rights, such as the right to protest -however, Confucians still advocate a single ruler
What are the characteristics and core teachings of Daoism?
· Human ritual has the ability to change nature. If one can control it, there is power to be had in nature, however if one does not know enough, there can be detrimental effects
· Led to the beginning of scientific methods such as observation, experimentation, description and classification
What are the characteristics and core teachings of Christianity? How and where did Christianity spread by 600 CE?
-Importance of faith · Important figure = Jesus · Christianity is monotheistic · God is all-knowing · All people are sinners, which separates us from God
What are the characteristics and core teachings of Greco-Roman philosophy?
· Used logic and objective questioning to solve problems, as opposed to the use of gods and religion
· The scientific method developed from Greco-Roman philosophy as a way to investigate the workings of nature
· Attempted to view the universe as parts of a whole; philosophers developed the concept of atoms as building blocks of matter
How did religions affect gender roles in their respective societies?
Belief systems affected gender roles:
• Buddhism’s encouragement of a
monastic life
• Confucianism’s emphasis on filial piety
How did humans’ reliance on the natural world influence religion?
- Shamanism: belief in people who can connect to gods and the spirits of nature
- Animism: the attribution to plants, inanimate objects, and animals, the material universe
- used to have resources and plants and animals
How did humans relate to their deceased ancestors?
Ancestor veneration persisted in many regions.
• Africa • Mediterranean region • East Asia • Andean areas
How did art and culture develop to 600 CE?
Artistic expressions show distinctive cultural developments
• literature and drama • architecture • sculpture
What literary works influenced later eras?
Literature and drama acquired distinctive forms. (Greek tragedy, Indian
epics) that influenced artistic developments in neighboring regions and in
later time periods. (Athens, Persia, South Asia)