but as Tom said, reading a separate book specific to each religion you want to study would be much more helpful if you're willing and able to devote that much time to it.
For now, I am tempted to give up on Religious Literary and skip to Smith's.
I suppose this is sort of a survey. Or not. Whatever: world religions
28/08/2012 03:39:17 PM
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It's hard to suggest something when you can't elucidate a goal
28/08/2012 08:51:22 PM
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I know. I'm sorry.
28/08/2012 09:49:33 PM
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The best one I have is The Religious Experience of Mankind by Ninian Smart.
29/08/2012 02:09:14 AM
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Also, you might want to try typing in "Oxford World Religion" at amazon.com
28/08/2012 08:54:52 PM
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I'd recommend "The World's Religions" by Huston Smith
28/08/2012 09:35:59 PM
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I do own that.
28/08/2012 09:51:15 PM
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Haven't really read much about religion... interesting question.
28/08/2012 10:13:08 PM
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I've read her book on Muhammad
28/08/2012 10:38:31 PM
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Hm, yes, I can see that... that she doesn't really dare to tackle controversies too much.
28/08/2012 11:03:11 PM
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With respect to Islam, I prefer the Ibn Warraq edited ones.
29/08/2012 02:13:25 AM
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I think the main effect is it means they can't be read alone to get a balanced picture
29/08/2012 05:19:55 PM
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I think for what you're looking for, Wikipedia and related online resources is all you need. *NM*
01/09/2012 02:19:14 PM
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