000 02446nam a22002537a 4500
005 20250825162200.0
008 250825b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9781847921871
037 _cGifted
_nUnknown
041 _aEnglish
082 _a201.72
_bARM/FI
100 _aArmstrong, Karen
245 _aFIELDS OF BLOOD : Religion and the History of Violence
250 _a1
260 _aLondon
_bBodley Head
_c2014
300 _g499
500 _a Countering the atheist claim that believers are by default violent fanatics and religion is the cause of all major wars, Karen Armstrong demonstrates that religious faith is not inherently violent. In fact, the world’s major religions have throughout their history displayed ambivalent attitudes towards aggression and warfare. At times they have allied themselves with states and empires for protection or to further their influence; at others they have tried to curb state oppression and aggression and worked for peace and justice. Taking us on a journey from prehistoric times to the present, Karen Armstrong contrasts medieval crusaders and modern-day jihadists with the pacifism of the Buddha and Jesus’ vision of a just and peaceful society; moreover, she demonstrates that the underlying reasons – social, economic, political – for war and violence in our history often had very little to do with religion. While human beings have a natural propensity for aggression, collective violence and warfare emerged at a certain point in history when the invention of agriculture created a society and a state based on the accumulation of wealth. For most of history our destructive potential could be contained but with the industrialised warfare and all-powerful state of the modern age, humanity is on the brink of destroying itself. Vast in scope, impeccably researched and passionately argued, Fields of Blood is more than a corrective to the prevailing view that religion is to blame for most of the bloodshed throughout human history: it is a celebration of those religious ideas and movements that have opposed war and aggression and promoted peace and reconciliation.
650 _aReligion 
650 _aReligious mythology, general classes of religion, interreligious relations and attitudes, social theology 
650 _aAttitudes of religions toward social issues 
650 _aPolitical affairs
942 _cLEN
942 _2ddc
999 _c196197
_d196197