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Arguments between those who hold religious beliefs and those who do
not have been at fever pitch. They have also reached an impasse,
with equally entrenched views held by believer and atheist - and
even agnostic - alike. This collection is one of the first books to
move beyond this deadlock. Specially commissioned chapters address
major areas that cut across the debate between the two sides: the
origin of knowledge, objectivity and meaning; moral values and the
nature of the human person and the good life; and the challenge of
how to promote honest and fruitful dialogue in the light of the
wide diversity of beliefs, religious and otherwise. Under these
broad headings leading figures in the field examine and reflect
upon: Secular and religious humanism The idea of the sacred The
vexed issue of science in both religious and secular accounts of
knowledge Spirituality for the godless Non-western perspectives on
the atheism/theism debate. A key feature of the collection is a
dialogue between Raymond Tallis and Rowan Williams, former
Archbishop of Canterbury. Religion and Atheism: Beyond the Divide
will interest anyone who is concerned about the clash between the
religious and the secular and how to move beyond it, as well as
students of ethics, philosophy of religion and religious studies.
This collection of essays critically engages with Charles Taylor's
idea of a Catholic modernity through focusing on the crucial issue
of the shape and role of religion in modernity. Taylor launched the
idea in his seminal 1996 essay A Catholic Modernity?, and the idea
is here explored in relation to other Christian denominations and
non-Christian traditions. Taylor's proposal has the potential to
become a central and encompassing perspective in thinking about
relations between modernity and religion/transcendence in each
religious tradition. Six leading authors from diverse
backgrounds-David Martin, Bernice Martin, Francis Schussler
Fiorenza, Robert Cummings Neville, Souleymane Bachir Diagne and
Jonathan Boyarin-assess Taylor's Catholic modernity idea and probe
whether and how the extension to other religious modernities
(Anglican, Pentecostal, Confucian, Islamic, Jewish) makes sense-or
not. Charles Taylor reacts to their considerations and reflects on
his own idea 25 years on.
Arguments between those who hold religious beliefs and those who do
not have been at fever pitch. They have also reached an impasse,
with equally entrenched views held by believer and atheist - and
even agnostic - alike. This collection is one of the first books to
move beyond this deadlock. Specially commissioned chapters address
major areas that cut across the debate between the two sides: the
origin of knowledge, objectivity and meaning; moral values and the
nature of the human person and the good life; and the challenge of
how to promote honest and fruitful dialogue in the light of the
wide diversity of beliefs, religious and otherwise. Under these
broad headings leading figures in the field examine and reflect
upon: Secular and religious humanism The idea of the sacred The
vexed issue of science in both religious and secular accounts of
knowledge Spirituality for the godless Non-western perspectives on
the atheism/theism debate. A key feature of the collection is a
dialogue between Raymond Tallis and Rowan Williams, former
Archbishop of Canterbury. Religion and Atheism: Beyond the Divide
will interest anyone who is concerned about the clash between the
religious and the secular and how to move beyond it, as well as
students of ethics, philosophy of religion and religious studies.
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