This section contains 480 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) |
The Dangers of a Theocracy
Summary: The dangers posed by a theocracy in a strictly religious community.
Puritanism is defined as the strict interpretation of the fundamental Protestant philosophy. As a result of this stringent community, characters challenged the town's restrictions to cause utter pandemonium in the settlement. Hence, religious intervention in town politics was the chief contributor to the mayhem and corruption in the town of Salem.
Salem is described as a small, confined village in Massachusetts. Salem citizens know very little about the outside world and consume their time with work and religion. Entertainment and pleasure is considered fruitless and a waste of valuable time. Puritans, therefore, can most closely be compared to stoics based on their ideals and belief system. Religion is the foundation of the civilization. People may only do what is moral and there are strict and severe punishments for those who refuse to obey. The rigid restrictions and boundaries that kept the society in line resulted in a steadily...
This section contains 480 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) |