Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
P&T Revision - Coggle Diagram
P&T Revision
Judaism
Shabbat
Shabbat is a celebration for when God rested. It starts on Friday a night with a meal and some prayers and ends on Saturday evening with another ceremony called havdalah. This is a weekly festival
Orthodox Jews do not use any type of electricity or modern object such as: cars, ovens, stoves, digital devices or anything else
Reform Jews do use electronics and other modern items because they see Shabbat as a time for spiritual togetherness
Passover
Passover is a Jewish festival celebrated once a year to celebrate when god commanded the Egyptians to free the Jews from being slaves
During the story, god sent the angel of death to Egypt and commanded the Jews to put the blood of a baby lamb on the door frame outside or the angle of death would come and kill their first born child.
For Passover, a very special meal is prepared without using yeast or flour
bar mitzvah
A bar mitzvah is a Jewish celebration of a child going through adolescence. A bar mitzvah is celebrated when a boy turns 13
-
-
-
Holocaust
-
The Jews had always been looking for a home and they finally found one until they had to go into hiding from the germans
Ethics
Utilitarianism
The view that an action is determined as good or bad depending on how much pleasure or pain it has caused
-
Often it is difficult to quantify units of pain and pleasure which is why Jeremy Bentham’s theory later became less popular
Hedonic calculus is the method in which how much pleasure or pain was produced and therefore whether the action was a good one or a bad one
In life or death situations, there is not enough time to think about what action would cause for or less pleasure than pain and makes it difficult to be a utilitarian
Relativism
The belief that no action that would usually seem bad is necessarily bad but it depends on the situation
-
-
-
Islam
5 pillars of Islam
-
-
-
5: Hajj - a sacred pilgrimage that Muslims should make a least once in their lives to the sacred city of Makkah if they are financially and physically able to
-
-