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The Making Of A Nilhist

Decent Essays

World View Essay: The Making of a Nilhist
Author Mynga Futrell, states in her "Worldview Sampler" that a person 's overall worldview is their interpretation of the world based on a collection of beliefs about life. This worldview can be religious or nonreligious, based on how a person’s perception develops or becomes altered. Development begins at birth and throughout a child 's upbringing, this alters as the child proceeds through life into adulthood. Regarding Futrell, I completely agree; my childhood had been strictly religious, and my schooling offered a different form of thinking towards the views I first developed, from that my perception on life shifted from Christianity to realism. For my father there is a God; God had rules, and we (the people) should follow these rules otherwise you’d go to hell. Furthermore, my mother taught of the existence of an essence of something divine, but she couldn’t agree God existed-she believed in the possible existence of something but didn 't believe it had an influence on her life. For her, no heaven or hell existed, only the possibility of reincarnating.

The worldview, I established derived from a communal authority, namely my father and mother. To my father, there is God, being supreme and divine with ultimate rule and law over all. My father would teach that god crafted what is, and his creation must live a virtuous life under him, otherwise hell became the alternative. Virtue to my father consisted of ten commandments.

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