Traditions configuration: Difference between revisions

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# Christianity  
# Christianity  
## Catholicism  
## Nicene Christianity
### Latin Church
### Catholicism — Note by Daniel: Catholicism has as one of its features a remarkable capacity for local syncretism, very often adopting, enfolding, informing, etc. local religions, saints, spirits, traditions, rituals, particularly in Central and South America and Africa, but in other places also, giving many of these very different flavors and thus likely relationships to emergent phenomena, etc.
#### Jesuits
#### Latin Church
#### Carmelites
##### Jesuits
#### Franciscans
##### Carmelites
#### Dominicans
##### Franciscans
#### Cistercians
##### Dominicans
#### Beguines and Beghards
##### Cistercians
### Eastern Catholic Church
##### Beguines and Beghards
#### Eastern Catholic Church
## Protestantism
## Protestantism
### Pentecostalism – 280 million  
### Pentecostalism – 280 million  
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### Messianic Judaism – 0.3 million  
### Messianic Judaism – 0.3 million  
## Orthodox Christianity  
## Orthodox Christianity  
### Eastern Orthodox Church
### Eastern Orthodoxy
### Western Orthodox Church
#### Greek Orthodox Pratriarchates or Churches
## Evangelical Christianity
##### Constantinople
##### Alexandria
##### Antioch
##### Jerusalem
##### Russia
##### Serbia
##### Romania
##### Bulgaria
##### Georgia
##### Cyprus
##### Greece
##### Poland
##### Albania
##### Czech Lands and Slovakia
##### North Macedonia
### Oriental Orthodox Churches
#### Coptic Orthodox
#### Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo
#### Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo
#### Syriac Orthodox
#### Armenian Apostolic
#### Malankara Orthodox Syrian
#### Western Orthodoxy
### Evangelical Christianity
### Restorationist
#### Mormon/Latter-day Saint movement (17 million members)
#### Jehovah's Witnesses (8.7 million members)
# Islam  
# Islam  
## Sunnīsm
## Sunnīsm
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## Kharījism  
## Kharījism  
## Sufīsm  
## Sufīsm  
# Hinduism  
## Ahmadiyya movement
## Salafism
## Wahhabism
# Hinduism — Note by Daniel: Hinduism, as much as contemporary nationalist movements want to make it a coherent religion, is nothing of the kind, with probably more local gods, variants, diversity of view, etc. than any other tradition on this list.
## Advaita Vedānta  
## Advaita Vedānta  
## Yogic Schools
## Arya Samaj
### Kundalini Yoga
## ISKCON (Hare Krishna)
## Sant Mat traditions
## Shaivism  
## Shaivism  
## Vaishnavism
## Shaktism  
## Shaktism  
## Smartism
## Smartism
## Vaishnavism
## Yogic Schools
### Bhakti yoga
### Hatha yoga
### Jñana yoga
### Karma yoga
### Kundalini Yoga
### Raja yoga
# Buddhism  
# Buddhism  
## Mahāyāna Buddhism  
## Mahāyāna Buddhism  
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## Theravāda Buddhism: this itself has huge internal diversity  
## Theravāda Buddhism: this itself has huge internal diversity  
## Regional traditions > not sure here?
## Regional traditions > not sure here?
### Contemporary Western Buddhism
### Japanese New Religious Movements (Soka Gakkai)
### Korean Buddhism
### Nichiren Buddhism
### Thai Forest Tradition
### Tibetan Buddhism  
### Tibetan Buddhism  
### Contemporary Western Buddhism
### Vietnamese Buddhism
### ?
# Folk Traditions  
# Folk Traditions  
## African traditional religions  
## African traditional religions  
## African Diasporic religions (Vodou, Candomblé, Umbanda)
## Australian Aboriginal religions
## Baltic paganism
## Chinese folk religions
## Native American religions  
## Native American religions  
## Chinese folk religions  
## Nordic pre-Christian traditions
## Australian Aboriginal religions
## Pacific Islander religions
## Slavic paganism
## Vietnamese folk religion (Đạo Mẫu)
# Other Traditions  
# Other Traditions  
## Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophical Schools  
## Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophical Schools  
## Ancient Egypt  
## Ancient Egypt  
## Confucianism
## Confucianism
## Druze faith
## Falun Gong
## Gnosticism
## Gnosticism
## Hermetism
## Hermetism
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### Discordianism
### Discordianism
### Druidry
### Druidry
### IOT/Chaos
### Japanese new religious movements (Oomoto, Seicho-no-Ie)
### Kimbanguism
### Kimbanguism
### Neopaganism
### Neopaganism
### Korean new religious movements (Cheondoism, Jeungsanism)
### New Age spirituality
### New Age spirituality
### OTO
### Raëlism
### Raëlism
### Rastafarianism
### Rastafarianism
### Samaritanism
### Santeria
### Santeria
### Scientology
### Scientology
### Tenrikyo
### Tenrikyo
### Thelema
### Vietnamese Hòa Hảo
### Wicca
### Wicca
### OTO
### Thelema
### IOT/Chaos
## Orphism
## Orphism
## Other  
## Other  
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## Shinto
## Shinto
## Shamanism
## Shamanism
### Siberian shamanic traditions
### Korean shamanism (Muism)
## Sikhism
## Sikhism
## Spiritism
## Spiritism

Revision as of 11:44, 22 January 2025

Back end

Namespace configuration will need to include:

Permissions

Moderation


Front end

Template will need to include:

  • Basic demographics; (numbers of people in tradition) - don't highlight this (infobox) > [Is this really needed or do we link to wikipedia which has all this info and more?]
  • [The following is the core element of the traditional template] Views on emergence in general, typologies of EPEEs, normal VS abnormal, and developmental models; i.e. what is ok and what is not, how do you deal with them when they arise > Structure this according to the DSM stuff! DSM 5 categories for religious exemption (structure questions around the categories e.g. hallucination, pscyhosis, etc. What would you say applies to this exemption according to your tradition?)
  • Beliefs and views (what are you?) nature of experience, consciousness, humans
    • Beliefs, Views, Metaphysics — e.g. reality, substance, causality, properties, relations, categories of beings, universals, particulars, space, time, freedom, …, these are some of the topic of metaphysics (Sjösdedt-Hughes, 2023).
      1. Ontology
        • Nature of Reality, Mind, and Being in General
          • Substantialist views
            • Monisms
              • Idealist Monisms — Solipsism, Immaterialism, etc.
              • Materialist Monisms — Physicalism, Eliminativism, Behaviorism, Emergentism, Epiphenomenalism, etc.
              • Other Monisms — Neutral monism, Panpsychism, Biopsychism, Theistic Monism (Islam), etc.
            • Dualisms — Mind-body Dualism, Interactionism
            • Pluralisms — Platonic Theory of Ideas, Animism, Infinite Aspects Monism (Spinoza), Triune God (arguably, Catholicism, though usually thought of as a monotheism with three hyposthases)
          • Non-substantialist Metaphysics
            • Phenomenological Ontologies — Michel Henry’s non-intentional phenomenology, Merleau-Ponty’s Endo-ontology
            • Functionalism (Bitbol, 2010) (Ernst Cassirer: Subject/Object, the cognitive relation, has no ontological grounding, only a functional one)
            • Non-foundationalist non-substantialism — Thinkers and traditions that hold there is no intrinsic ultimate substance nor a specific ultimate origin or foundation to phenomena, and that such concepts are in fact mistaken. Meister Eckhart seemed close to this, Parmenides as well, Buddhist philosophy of dependent origination (inter-being) and Emptiness (e.g. Madhyamika philosophy), perhaps Nietzsche, William James, Rob Burbea, etc.
          • Agnosticism
      2. Real beings? Categories of beings? Order of beings?
        • Deity/Deities
          • Monotheism, Polytheism, Pantheism, Deism, Panentheism, Atheism, etc.
          • Creator God ?
          • Hierarchy of beings, ex : Quantum Bayesianism; String Theory; Periodic Table of the Elements; Celestial hierarchies (Pseudo-Dionysius) ; Greek Pantheon (Dodecatheism) ; The Great Chain of Being; etc.
          • True Nature of Ultimate Being - ex : Brahman; Śūnyatā
          • True Nature of Beings - ex : Transcendent Realism (e.g. Angels really exist somewhere);  Immortal Soul; Atman; Non-essentialism (Śūnyatā); Atomism
          • True Nature of phenomenal existence and individual subjectivity - ex : Maya, illusory; The thing in itself (Kant); Phenomenalism: phenomena (including perhaps angels) do appear but do not have “real”, inherent reality, being, or substance “behind” or “underneath” phenomena.
      3. Cosmology
        • Origins and Ends
          • of the Cosmos — e.g. Creation in 7 days; Causation without foundation (Bitbol, 2014) ; Dependent Origination: no foundation but radical interdependence); Continual creation (Bergson); Big Bang
          • of Beings
        • Laws ruling the Cosmos — ex : God’s Will; Karma
          • Man's place in the Cosmos;
          • Status and Nature of individual agency - ex : Free Will
  • Epistemics (where does the knowledge come from? divine revelation/textual/etc.)
    1. Epistemology —Whence does valid knowledge/perception/cognition arise ?
      • Sources of knowledge — e.g. Perception (Direct perception: Phenomenology, Pramana), Reflection/Reasoning, Faith, Reliable testimony, Revelation, Intuition, Authority — Scriptures, Religious Figures…, Experimental reproducibility/falsifiability…
      • Logic — E.g. Inference, Comparison and analogy, Self-evidence/Apodicticity, Postulation, derivation - Induction, Truth and Justification, Valid Cognition
      • Theory of mind, knower/known
  • Soteriological doctrine what saves you and what are you being saved from
    • Soteriology - This is related to but not the same as Metaphysics. What is Salvation ? How is it attained ? What is it we need to be saved from? e.g.: Experiential knowledge (Buddhism), Knowledge (Gnosticism), Faith and Devotion (Catholicism), Different possibilities (Hinduism sees Jñana, Karma, Bhakti, as different but equally valid paths to salvation).
  • Preferred linguistics and key concepts woven through the document (Olivier notes: I've begun something like this in Zenkit in the Lexicon collection which can be integrated)
  • [Possible additional elements]
    • Authority
      • Scriptural
      • Temporal - Organized Religion ? Clergy ? Hierarchies ?
    • Rituals and Practices (e.g. Rituals of Devotion, Dietary practices, Meditative practices);
    • Religious Institutions and Affiliation
    • Modes of Living, Codes and Precepts (ex : Priesthood, Monasticism, Laity)
    • Ethical principles;

Infoboxes will need to include:

Bullet point details

Editing policy on pages

Guide for contributors

Structuring system - which Categories can be applied?


Etic

Emic

Abrahamic

  1. Christianity  
    1. Nicene Christianity
      1. Catholicism — Note by Daniel: Catholicism has as one of its features a remarkable capacity for local syncretism, very often adopting, enfolding, informing, etc. local religions, saints, spirits, traditions, rituals, particularly in Central and South America and Africa, but in other places also, giving many of these very different flavors and thus likely relationships to emergent phenomena, etc.
        1. Latin Church
          1. Jesuits
          2. Carmelites
          3. Franciscans
          4. Dominicans
          5. Cistercians
          6. Beguines and Beghards
        2. Eastern Catholic Church
    2. Protestantism
      1. Pentecostalism – 280 million
      2. Anglicanism – 110 million
      3. Baptist churches – 100 million
      4. Nondenominational Christianity – 80–100 million
      5. Lutheranism – 70–90 million
      6. Methodism – 60–80 million
      7. Reformed churches (Calvinism) – 60–80 million
      8. African initiated churches – 60 million
      9. Chinese Patriotic Christian Churches - 25 million
      10. Eastern Protestant Christianity – 22 million
      11. Adventism – 21.80 million
      12. New Apostolic Church – 10 million
      13. Restorationism – 7 million
      14. Anabaptism – 4 million
      15. Local churches – 1 to 10 million
      16. Plymouth Brethren – 1 million
      17. Hussites – 1 million
      18. Quakers – 0.4 million
      19. Messianic Judaism – 0.3 million
    3. Orthodox Christianity
      1. Eastern Orthodoxy
        1. Greek Orthodox Pratriarchates or Churches
          1. Constantinople
          2. Alexandria
          3. Antioch
          4. Jerusalem
          5. Russia
          6. Serbia
          7. Romania
          8. Bulgaria
          9. Georgia
          10. Cyprus
          11. Greece
          12. Poland
          13. Albania
          14. Czech Lands and Slovakia
          15. North Macedonia
      2. Oriental Orthodox Churches
        1. Coptic Orthodox
        2. Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo
        3. Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo
        4. Syriac Orthodox
        5. Armenian Apostolic
        6. Malankara Orthodox Syrian
        7. Western Orthodoxy
      3. Evangelical Christianity
      4. Restorationist
        1. Mormon/Latter-day Saint movement (17 million members)
        2. Jehovah's Witnesses (8.7 million members)
  2. Islam  
    1. Sunnīsm
      1. Ḥanafī Sunnīsm (45%)
      2. Shāfiʿī Sunnīsm (28%)
      3. Mālikī Sunnīsm (15%)
      4. Ḥanbalī Sunnīsm (2%)
    2. Shī‘ism
      1. Twelver Shīʿīsm (8.5%)
      2. Zaydī Shīʿīsm (0.5%)
      3. Ismāʿīlī Shīʿīsm (0.5%)
        1. Ghulat
    3. Kharījism
    4. Sufīsm
    5. Ahmadiyya movement
    6. Salafism
    7. Wahhabism
  3. Hinduism — Note by Daniel: Hinduism, as much as contemporary nationalist movements want to make it a coherent religion, is nothing of the kind, with probably more local gods, variants, diversity of view, etc. than any other tradition on this list.
    1. Advaita Vedānta
    2. Arya Samaj
    3. ISKCON (Hare Krishna)
    4. Sant Mat traditions
    5. Shaivism
    6. Shaktism
    7. Smartism
    8. Vaishnavism
    9. Yogic Schools
      1. Bhakti yoga
      2. Hatha yoga
      3. Jñana yoga
      4. Karma yoga
      5. Kundalini Yoga
      6. Raja yoga
  4. Buddhism  
    1. Mahāyāna Buddhism
      1. Madhyamaka
      2. Yogacāra
      3. Pure Land
      4. Zen
        1. Soto
        2. Rinzai
        3. Ch’an
    2. Vajrayāna Buddhism
      1. Tantra
      2. Dzogchen
      3. Mahāmūdra
      4. Shingon: sort of Zen meets Vajrayana
    3. Theravāda Buddhism: this itself has huge internal diversity
    4. Regional traditions > not sure here?
      1. Contemporary Western Buddhism
      2. Japanese New Religious Movements (Soka Gakkai)
      3. Korean Buddhism
      4. Nichiren Buddhism
      5. Thai Forest Tradition
      6. Tibetan Buddhism
      7. Vietnamese Buddhism
  5. Folk Traditions  
    1. African traditional religions
    2. African Diasporic religions (Vodou, Candomblé, Umbanda)
    3. Australian Aboriginal religions
    4. Baltic paganism
    5. Chinese folk religions
    6. Native American religions
    7. Nordic pre-Christian traditions
    8. Pacific Islander religions
    9. Slavic paganism
    10. Vietnamese folk religion (Đạo Mẫu)
  6. Other Traditions  
    1. Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophical Schools
    2. Ancient Egypt
    3. Confucianism
    4. Druze faith
    5. Falun Gong
    6. Gnosticism
    7. Hermetism
    8. Jainism
    9. Judaism
    10. Kabbalah
    11. Magical or occult practices
    12. Mandaeism
    13. Manichaeism
    14. Martial Arts
    15. Neoplatonism
    16. New Religious Movements
      1. Ásatrú/Heathenry
      2. Baha'i Faith
      3. Cao Dai
      4. Discordianism
      5. Druidry
      6. IOT/Chaos
      7. Japanese new religious movements (Oomoto, Seicho-no-Ie)
      8. Kimbanguism
      9. Neopaganism
      10. Korean new religious movements (Cheondoism, Jeungsanism)
      11. New Age spirituality
      12. OTO
      13. Raëlism
      14. Rastafarianism
      15. Samaritanism
      16. Santeria
      17. Scientology
      18. Tenrikyo
      19. Thelema
      20. Vietnamese Hòa Hảo
      21. Wicca
    17. Orphism
    18. Other
    19. Perennialism
    20. Shinto
    21. Shamanism
      1. Siberian shamanic traditions
      2. Korean shamanism (Muism)
    22. Sikhism
    23. Spiritism
    24. Western Esotericism
      1. Alchemy
      2. Astrology
      3. Freemasonry
      4. Gnosticism
      5. Hermeticism
      6. Illuminism
      7. Kabbalah
      8. Neoplatonism
      9. Rosicrucianism
      10. Tenrikyo
      11. Theosophy
    25. Taoism
    26. Transcendental meditation
    27. Western Mindfulness Movement
    28. Yazidism
    29. Zoroastrianism