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Cults
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The study of cults sits at the intersection of religious studies, sociology, and history, making it a subject addressed in courses ranging from world religions and anthropology to social psychology and cultural studies. The term itself carries significant academic tension — as several student papers on this topic note, scholars of religion tend to avoid the word "cult" because of its pejorative connotations in popular usage. Academically, the concept encompasses a broad range of religious groups, ancient ritual practices, and modern movements, raising questions about power, meaning, authority, and the boundaries between mainstream religion and alternative belief systems.

Student papers on this topic approach the subject from several distinct angles. Some treat cults in their classical sense, examining ritual worship of gods in ancient Greece, Rome, or other early civilizations. Others focus on modern religious groups, their social structures, and their relationship to established institutions like the church. Comparative approaches are common, placing cults alongside recognized world religions such as Christianity, Islam, and Hinduism to analyze how institutional legitimacy is constructed. Regionally specific case studies, such as the relationship between cults and Los Angeles, also appear, grounding abstract religious concepts in concrete social and economic contexts.

A strong essay on this topic requires a clearly defined scope — whether the focus is ancient ritual practice, modern movements, or the sociology of religious groups more broadly. Evidence drawn from historical sources, theological frameworks, or sociological analysis of group behavior and power dynamics tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is relying on sensationalized portrayals rather than engaging seriously with how scholars define and distinguish religious groups from mainstream institutions.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Cults and religious establishments
Indeed, it is very difficult to think of two traditions that could be more radically different than those as embodied by the movement of the Nation of Islam in America and the tradition of Vodou as it is practiced in…
Paper Undergraduate
Terrorist targeting preferences and methodologies in counter-terrorism intelligence strategy
Terrorism is a complex and widely used term in today's lexicon. What started out as a tactical approach to warfare has seemingly morphed into a label for loosely organized Muslim militias.
Research Paper Doctorate
Cults and establishments: organizational structures and dynamics
Regina M. Schwartz presents a radical, stimulating view on the meaning of monotheism. Its influence, according to the author, extends far beyond theological import. Monotheism informs cultural consciousness and greatly…
Research Paper Doctorate
Gnosticism and Earlier Christian Texts
Early Christian polemicists such as Clement of Alexandria, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus of Lyons, and Tertullian all attacked Gnosticism as ‘heresy' and until the 20th Century virtually nothing was known about it except in the distorted texts they had written. Their purpose was to construct the boundaries between what later became ‘orthodox' or ‘catholic' Christianity in opposition to Judaism, paganism and carious Christian ‘heresies'. Until the fourth and fifth centuries, however, when Christianity became the state religion of the Roman Empire under "the guiding influence of the Christian emperors" like Constantine and Theodosius, Christian ‘orthodoxy' was still fluid and in dispute. Only because of the power of the Roman state did Christianity become a "monolithic unity" that had not existed before and redefined "manifold ancient religious practices into three mutually exclusive groups: Jews, Christians and pagans (King 22). Early Christian polemicists deliberately exaggerated the differences between these groups and minimized the similarities, although for the first three centuries of Christianity no commonly recognized hierarchy or Scriptural canon existed.
Research Paper Doctorate
Computers and the Internet
When Roszak refers to the "naked mind," he means to speak about the capacity and ability of the human mind as compared to the capabilities that the computer machines can do. According to Roszak, how the human mind works…
Research Paper Doctorate
Eleusinian Cult of Demeter and Magical Initiation Rites
¶ … Eleusinian Cult of Demeter and the Magical Initiation Rites that are part of each of those groups. The writer explores the groups and explains many of their beliefs and ways while focusing on the differences and…
Thesis Undergraduate
African voodoo: history, practices, and cultural significance
Voodoo, also named Vodun, is an ancient polytheistic religion originating in West Africa. Voodoo spread from West Africa to the New World through the slaves. Today it practiced by an estimated 30 million people in…
Research Paper Doctorate
Christianity versus cults: comparative analysis and distinctions
Christianity is the religion of millions of people in the world. Christians, the followers of Jesus Christ and the Bible, face multitude of problems and challenges from other religious cults, (they claim to be based on…
Research Paper Doctorate
Politics during the Holocaust
The human social animal's capacity for collective tyranny and violence in Hannah Arendt's seminal work
Essay Doctorate
Terrorists Use the Qur\'an to Promote Hate and Killing
The Bible and the Qur'an are ancient religious texts that many -- if not most -- believers in the Christian faith and the Islamic faith take literally. At least in part, most Christians are likely to accept the…