I am a very curious person. That's also why I like polls so much.
There has been several threads related to religion on this forum. As we are very cosmopolitan, with members from Japan, Europe, America, Australia, Indonesia, Malaysia, China, India and many other places, I am interested to know what people interested in Japan actually believe in.
I'll go a bit further than that and help people confused about their religious believes to decide in which category they fit.
For too many Westerners (and Japanese !) it is actually hard to say what they really believe in. Younger Europeans especially are rarely convinced Christians. Most should rather call themselves :
- deist : those who believe in the existence of a supreme being (God) that has created the universe but does not intervene in human affairs. People in thi category often come from Christian families, but do not believe in the bible or Christian religion. Deist think religion was made by humans and has no divine origin.
- agnostic : aren't sure that god exist and think humans have no way to prove its existence.
- atheist : refute the existence of god(s) by the way of logic or philosophical reasoning. They can have moral rules, but based philosophy, not religion. We could consider Buddhism as a form of moral atheism.
- not religious : don't care about religion, never think about it and live well without it.
The above work for people from any religious background, all around the world. Most Japanese are probably either not religious or animist. I don't think there are many true Buddhists nowadays.
- Animist : believe in the existence of souls in the nature, such as in trees, river, rocks... what Japanese call kami(sama).
Animist people don't believe in one god and strict religious rules. They are usually superstitious. There are animist everywhere in the world, not just in Japanese Shinto. Native Americans, some tribes of Africa, India and Indonesia are animists.
Don't confuse animism with polytheism :
- polytheists believe in several gods, usually a pantheon, with each god having a particular attribute (e.g. : god of sun, sea, sky, beauty, arts, love, goodluck, creation, music, etc.). Most polytheism are extinct, such as the Greco-Roman, Viking or Egyptian ones. The most famous remaining is Hinduism. Some forms of popular Buddhism have their gods too and can be considered as polytheism.
There has been several threads related to religion on this forum. As we are very cosmopolitan, with members from Japan, Europe, America, Australia, Indonesia, Malaysia, China, India and many other places, I am interested to know what people interested in Japan actually believe in.
I'll go a bit further than that and help people confused about their religious believes to decide in which category they fit.
For too many Westerners (and Japanese !) it is actually hard to say what they really believe in. Younger Europeans especially are rarely convinced Christians. Most should rather call themselves :
- deist : those who believe in the existence of a supreme being (God) that has created the universe but does not intervene in human affairs. People in thi category often come from Christian families, but do not believe in the bible or Christian religion. Deist think religion was made by humans and has no divine origin.
- agnostic : aren't sure that god exist and think humans have no way to prove its existence.
- atheist : refute the existence of god(s) by the way of logic or philosophical reasoning. They can have moral rules, but based philosophy, not religion. We could consider Buddhism as a form of moral atheism.
- not religious : don't care about religion, never think about it and live well without it.
The above work for people from any religious background, all around the world. Most Japanese are probably either not religious or animist. I don't think there are many true Buddhists nowadays.
- Animist : believe in the existence of souls in the nature, such as in trees, river, rocks... what Japanese call kami(sama).
Animist people don't believe in one god and strict religious rules. They are usually superstitious. There are animist everywhere in the world, not just in Japanese Shinto. Native Americans, some tribes of Africa, India and Indonesia are animists.
Don't confuse animism with polytheism :
- polytheists believe in several gods, usually a pantheon, with each god having a particular attribute (e.g. : god of sun, sea, sky, beauty, arts, love, goodluck, creation, music, etc.). Most polytheism are extinct, such as the Greco-Roman, Viking or Egyptian ones. The most famous remaining is Hinduism. Some forms of popular Buddhism have their gods too and can be considered as polytheism.