Nature and definition of a religious phenomenon

In their attempts to determine the nature of religion, researchers often refer to the Latin term religio. At the same time, there are several variants of his translation (piety, reverence, conscientiousness, etc.), but, deducing this word from the Latin word religare (bind, bind), preference is give...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anatolii M. Kolodnyi
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Ukrainian Association of Researchers of Religion (UARR) 2014-11-01
Series:Українське Pелігієзнавство
Online Access:https://uars.info/index.php/uars/article/view/429
Description
Summary:In their attempts to determine the nature of religion, researchers often refer to the Latin term religio. At the same time, there are several variants of his translation (piety, reverence, conscientiousness, etc.), but, deducing this word from the Latin word religare (bind, bind), preference is given to its etymology, proposed by the Christian apologist Lactania (near 250 - after 325). Since then, religion has emerged as a means of communicating man with God in serving him and obedience through piety. We note that "religion in general" does not exist. Historically, there were and there are only some specific species, confessions. Religious scholars count more than five thousand of them.
ISSN:2306-3548
2617-9792