The World’s Religions provides an orientation to the study of religion . Surveying the stages of development, worldviews, and current situations of the major world religions, this text discusses the ways these religions respond to contemporary ethical issues. It also presents a sampling of new religious movements and looks to the possible ways the world's religions may interact in the 21st century. Its distinctive “framework for understanding” religious worldviews allows readers to compare and contrast the teachings of religions objectively. Teaching and Learning Experience 0205949428 / 9780205949427 World's Religions, The Plus NEW MyReligionLab with eText -- Access Card Package Package consists 0205871429 / 9780205871421 NEW MyReligionLab with Pearson eText -- Valupack Access Card 0205917615 / 9780205917617 World's Religions, The
Concise, clear, and well-written. Like any book intended to survey religions, there are mild inaccuracies or oversimplified areas. However, in general, the author does a nice job of clarifying the definition of "religion" for the scope of the book. This sets a tone that makes the material very useful and keeps cultural bias minimized.
This is a fine book giving a good and balanced view of the various world religions. But there were some (mostly minor) errors in the sections on Japanese religions, so it made me wonder what errors there were on religions that I (as well as the author) did not know a lot about from first-hand experience.
I looked forward to reading the third section, "The World's Religions and Contemporary Ethical Issues." But it turns out, as I should have realized to begin with, there is about as much difference within each of the major religions as there is between the religions. So this section ended up not being very helpful at all, except for pointing out the diversity within the various religious traditions.
William A Young obviously has an excellent command of the subject of World Religions, but he is a poor writer. There are numerous instances of bad grammar and punctuation, the text does not flow, and he inserts exclamation points where exclamation points clearly did not belong. In his writing, he focuses on giving information, but he does not seem to care whether the information is accessible or not. It's incredibly dry and not very readable. That being said, there is a wealth of valuable information in this book. I think it gives fair and accurate descriptions of the histories, values, and practices of the world's major religions. I learned a lot from this book, but it was hard work.