Post #100550
July 13, 2017, 11:30:47 PM
I do think tau has a point though. The east and the west have very different views on religion itself. While in the west our societies are based around religion, in the east its almost the other way around. Having done a lot of study into this one of the things that struck me about religions like Hinduism, Buddhism and Chinese Folk Religion is that they are all very personal. Of the major religions in the east only Buddhism and Sikhism have any sort of real holy text, though Sikhism itself is a very new religion in the grand scheme of things. (Hinduism's Mahabharata and the Vedic scrolls and the like are situational due to Hinduism's disparate nature. Calling Hinduism a religion is a misnomer honestly.) And even then the schools of Buddhism interpret things in vastly different ways. Unlike in the west where our morality is defined by our faith and our culture's traditional faith, in the east its almost the opposite, one is born into a religious tradition and may pick where in it they stand. The concepts we expect of religions in the west like holy texts, orthodoxy and heresy and a defined religious hierarchy either do not exist or have radically different status. Despite this disparate religious network, especially in India and China they are distinct societies. And now I feel like I'm rambling on so I'm just going to stop here xD