Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/15429
Title: Believing in a secular age : anthropology, sociology and religious experience
Authors: Baldacchino, Jean Paul
Kahn, Joel S.
Keywords: Secularism in literature
Religion and science
Discourse analysis, Literary
Religion and sociology
Issue Date: 2011
Publisher: The Australian Journal of Anthropology
Citation: Baldacchino, J. P., Kahn, J. S. (2011). Believing in a secular age : anthropology, sociology and religious experience. The Australian Journal of Anthropology, 22, 1-13.
Abstract: Charles Taylor’s A Secular Age generated a great deal of attention—and has stimulated important debates—among a diverse range of scholars in sociology, history, politics, religious studies and to a lesser extent, anthropologists. Much of the debate has focused on the impli- cations of Taylor’s work for the so-called secularisation thesis and the place (or non-place) of religion in the so-called public sphere. The essays in this volume arise less out of such con- cerns and more from Taylor’s discussion of secularism in a third, ‘experiential’ sense. Each paper addresses the question of what it is like to ‘believe’ (or not ‘believe’) in the modern world. Among other things the authors of the essays published in this Special Issue are con- cerned to develop better understandings of the conditions under which belief and unbelief may be experienced as open, rather than closed, to the possibility of other ontological con- struals, thereby building on Taylor’s insights into the phenomenology of modern secularism.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/15429
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