secularism - lecture notes Flashcards

1
Q

secularisation thesis

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Secularisation Thesis - Through progression into modernisation and the growth of rational thought religion loses its authority in all aspects of social life and governance

  • Sociology of religion = popular in second half of 20th century
  • Rooted in analysis of Weber, Durkheim and Marx
  • It is a thesis, and it is surrounded by a lot of theory that needs a bit of unpacking
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2
Q

value

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  • Value and making meaning traverse many locations, events and organisations that may be thought of a religious, secular or spiritual (whatever these words really mean)
    o what this means is that we need to consider a wide range of pursuits studied empirically to seek to encompass what it means to be valuable
  • For people in the contemporary age, the experience of things that are valued is coupled with things that are considered secular, religious and/or spiritual
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3
Q

secularisation as a narrative

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  • In the end ‘secularisation’ is a narrative (a constructed story of big moves in society) that assumes the decline of religions and their authority, and that their withdrawal into the private sphere is inevitable
  • It is important to understand that thought of in this way it is a narrative, built on assumptions, with little empirical evidence to support it
    o This is not to say that secularisation means nothing, but at students of religion we have to think about definitions and ideas more carefully
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4
Q

secularism and contrast

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  • Secularism then must be defined in contrast
    o An independent phenomenon
    o Emerging alongside
    o Does not exclude the appreciation of ‘sacred’ things
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5
Q

binary

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  • We cannot necessarily put religion and the secular as a binary
  • We must break down automatic connection between spirituality and religion
    o So it becomes possible to be ‘spiritual and not religious’ (a common perspective in the West)
  • The social scientific link between ‘spirits’ and a ‘spiritual’ or ‘enchanted’ world separate from the secular or unspiritual space breaks down
  • Seeking truth ‘behind’ religion beyond a simple secular idea may be an activity of humanism, atheism, or secularism
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6
Q

charles Taylor

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  • Charles Taylor (A Secular Age)
    o ‘spiritual’ – suggests something having value
    o Religion in modern secular life is a choice (among many choices) which may be chosen
    o ‘religion’ was something assumed authoritative practiced without much reflection
    o Asserts that it is not longer possible to practice religion in the traditional sense – ‘spiritual’ is then a preferred term for the choice to follow a religion
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