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Reviews for Merrill advanced mathematical concepts

 Merrill advanced mathematical concepts magazine reviews

The average rating for Merrill advanced mathematical concepts based on 2 reviews is 2.5 stars.has a rating of 2.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2020-09-03 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Christine Armas
Religion and culture is a subject too wide to compile different writings and talks on them. It leaves the impression of chaotic and unrelated topics chosen for this compilation, without thematic links between them. That being said, the book still gave a useful insinght in Foucault's views on religion.
Review # 2 was written on 2011-06-29 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 2 stars John Declark
Foucault's focus directly falls upon the pastoral power and the hermeneutics of the self which all developed within Christian ideology and practices. Through the Christian confession, implemented by the early church, a new form of knowledge is created through the confessor's repeated analysis of their own individual sins and their actions are influenced by the knowledge that they will later have to confess each sin they commit. Foucault applies his routine critical approach to religion, primarily early Christianity, in much the same manner as he analyzed the prison system, sexuality, psychiatry, and the medical institution. Foucault, who is commonly criticized for being a poor historian with bad sources who creates ideas from insufficient data, is commended for his use of scholarly sources when describing the roots of early sexuality within developing Christianity unlike when he was rifling through "obscure disciplinary codes of the 1800".Criticism of his later works on sexuality and, vicariously, his work on the confession and pastoral power depict his work as respected and well-researched, which truly makes one ponder on how much more he could've affected thought had he not passed away. Foucault recognizes Christianity as an ultimate power structure which imposes an obligation on its followers to accept its dogma, its sacred text and, most importantly, its authority as truth through confession and the pastoral power. People willingly submit to this much in the same way they submit to governmental and medical authority. Foucault doesn't seek to understand why this phenomenon occurs just that it does.


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