Will Humanity Survive Religion?: Beyond Divisive Absolutes

Will Humanity Survive Religion?: Beyond Divisive Absolutes

by W. Royce Clark
Will Humanity Survive Religion?: Beyond Divisive Absolutes

Will Humanity Survive Religion?: Beyond Divisive Absolutes

by W. Royce Clark

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Overview

When the “human sciences” in the West followed the physical sciences in the 18th and 19th centuries with new measurements, methods, and language, the “metaphysics of infinity” lost its credibility. The response of Western religions was to retrench in a stronger authoritarianism, especially by the last half of the 19th century. While the new human sciences were being extended even to study the history and philosophy of religions, those religions themselves placed more emphasis on their understanding of the Absolute or Unquestionable. That split became a burden both to those who were religious and to those who were not.



Here, W. Royce Clark argues that humanity’s survival may depend on the development of a universal or inclusive ethic in which religions move beyond their Absolutes. Clark poses the sharp challenge: Are religious communities ready to abandon the foundations that until now they have insisted were the only adequate foundation for ethics?

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781978708563
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 06/22/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 552
File size: 913 KB

About the Author

W. Royce Clark is professor emeritus of Pepperdine University.

Table of Contents

Preliminary Considerations: The “Camel” Burdened with a Metaphysical Absolute

Chapter 1. Religion’s Divisive Burden as Absolutism in a Scientific and Pluralistic Age

Chapter 2. The Absolute’s Divisive Burden in Segregating Humanity

Chapter 3. Inflexible Faith in the Absolute: The Burden of the Loss of Self

Chapter 4. The Absolute and its Burden of Miracles, Mystery, and Authority

Chapter 5. Fantasy vs. Reality: The Burden of Reason’s Limits

Chapter 6. Inhumane Faith: The Burden of Death as Evil or as Divine Punishment

Chapter 7. The Burden of Religion’s Historical/Mythical Claims and the Slippage of Categories

Chapter 8. The “Ugly Ditch”: The Burden of Historical Data’s Dead End

Chapter 9. That Same “Ditch”: The Dead End of the Historical/Mythological

Chapter 10. The Greatest Burden “After Auschwitz”: The Dead End of God as a Historical Liberator

Chapter 11. Conclusion and Challenges
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