CBSE BOARD XII, asked by soniakhokhar055, 4 months ago

Moral.Sci
how does a religion differ from another?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
24

Answer:

religion differ from other by their beliefs and ideology. ... The common among all the religion is that they believe in an imaginary person within their minds and treat them as high as the sky.

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Answered by rg337180
4

Answer:

MORALITY AND RELIGION . In the minds of many people, the terms morality and religion signal two related but distinct ideas. Morality is thought to pertain to the conduct of human affairs and relations between persons, while religion primarily involves the relationship between human beings and a transcendent reality. In fact, this distinction between religion and morality is a relatively modern one. Although tension between religion and morality is already evident in the writings of Plato and other Greek philosophers, the popular modern conception that religion and morality are separate phenomena is probably traceable to the Enlightenment. At that time, a number of thinkers, reflecting Europe's weariness with centuries of religious strife, sought to elaborate ethical theories based on reason or on widely shared human sentiments. In so doing they established the assumption that the norms governing conduct, morality, and ethics (that is, the effort to reason about or justify these norms) were separable from matters of religious belief.

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