: Critics have noted that Sharpe is weakest on East Asian traditions, largely omitting major figures like the sinologist James Legge.
: Reviewers on Amazon and Cambridge University Press praise Sharpe for his magisterial command of primary sources in multiple European languages.
: Later chapters address the impact of Freud and Jung and the tensions that arose between comparative religion and traditional theology. Critical Strengths
: He details the influence of anthropologists like Sir James Frazer, whose work, The Golden Bough , proposed that religion evolved from "primitive" magic toward higher ethical systems.
Sharpe’s work is not a comparison of religious doctrines themselves, but a that built the field. He traces the shift from a missionary-led "science of religion" to a neutral, interdisciplinary academic study.
: The narrative moves through the psychological insights of William James and the "phenomenology of religion" championed by figures like Rudolf Otto and Nathan Söderblom.
: It remains an indispensable text for graduate students and scholars looking to understand the "in-house politics" and intellectual lineage of religious studies. Notable Criticisms