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Benjamin E. Zeller

Auteur de Heaven's Gate: America's UFO Religion

3 oeuvres 69 utilisateurs 5 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Benjamin E. Zeller is Assistant Professor of Religion at Lake Forest College in Illinois.

Œuvres de Benjamin E. Zeller

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This book is definitely informative! Less true crime and more academic religious exploration. I learned so much about Heaven's Gate as a religion and the culture it emerged out of. However, because it's academic, it could be extremely difficult to read/understand. I enjoyed learning, but probably won't revisit.
 
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hestapleton | 2 autres critiques | May 7, 2020 |
This is a fairly scholarly work, but I found it easy enough to read. It does contain a sort of chronological history of the group, but mostly it's about the actual beliefs of the movement and the influences on them. I was convinced by his argument that they were actually a variation on your standard premillennial Protestant American Christianity, just filtered through an ufology hermeneutic--an assertion I found farfetched at first, but he was very thorough in examining the various influences on the group.

I really appreciated the way the author treated Heaven's Gate as a religion on its own terms--really diving into its worldview and showing how the belief system makes sense from the inside. He never treated the members like a bunch of brainwashed or mentally ill people he could dismiss, but instead really tried to understand what it was about the religious teachings and practice of Heaven's Gate that drew them in, and also why the group suicide was, in the end, inevitable. He managed to be compassionate without ever endorsing their beliefs.
… (plus d'informations)
 
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the_lirazel | 2 autres critiques | Apr 6, 2020 |
The author discusses how science can easily become scientism to serve the religious instinct. I think the topic of this book will become far more important in the coming years as "science" is heralded more and more as the purveyor of infallible omniscient truth while being used to justify ever more draconian policies that restrict human freedom.
 
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Chickenman | Sep 12, 2018 |
Chock full of analysis and information, but generally boring. That being said, anyone studying the relationship between religious food morals (Kosher, Halal) and environmental food morals (organic, vegetarian) should have this book on hand.
 
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Chickenman | Sep 11, 2018 |

Statistiques

Œuvres
3
Membres
69
Popularité
#250,752
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
5
ISBN
12

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