The intent behind this book is to provide grist for the mill for
research students and other interested readers. Chapter one, by
author Allan Savage, presents an understanding of the social
construction of religious activity, which maintains that social
construction of religion arises from a dialectical engagement
within the world from a phenomenological philosophical point of
view. Co-author Peter Stuart presents a classical and traditional
point of view, and readers expecting academic accord between the
authors will be disappointed.
A further rationale for writing this book is that both Savage
and Stuart desire to express their personal convictions in the
public forum. Both have interests in the ebb and flow of
civilization, especially as it pertains to the place of faith,
religion, politics, and a variety of social phenomena, including
economics, culture, gender, ethnicity, and the family, as well as
the ebb and flow of money, power, property, and prestige, as
articulated throughout history. They believe that writing about the
place of faith and religion in French Canada is crucial if one is
to understand the place that this 'keystone' civilization occupies
within confederation and its enduring ambivalence regarding its
belonging, or not, to Canada.
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