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- Title
RELIGION, SCIENCE, AND DISENCHANTMENT IN LATE MODERNITY: with Fraser Watts, "Mutual Enhancement between Science and Religion: In the Footsteps of the Epiphany Philosophers"; William H. Beharrell, "Transformation and the Waking Body: A Return to Truth via Our Bodies"; Marius Dorobantu and Yorick Wilks, "Moral Orthoses: A New Approach to Human and Machine Ethics"; Galen Watts, "Religion, Science, and Disenchantment in Late Modernity"; and Rowan Williams, "Epiphany Philosophers: Afterword."
- Authors
Watts, Galen
- Abstract
Late modernity has witnessed a growing semantic shift from "religion" to "spirituality." In this article, I argue what underlies this shift is a cultural structure I call the religion of the heart. I begin with an explication of what I mean by the "religion of the heart," and draw on the work of Ernst Troeltsch and Colin Campbell to identify what I take to be its historical antecedents. Second, I analyze the ambiguous relationships fostered between the religion of the heart and the discourses of science and religion, respectively, in late modernity. I illuminate how the social conditions of late modernity undermine or challenge what we conventionally think of as scientific and religious authorities, while at the same time creating existential needs that the religion of the heart is well adapted to meet. I conclude with a brief discussion of the implications of this process, especially as it relates to the sustainability of science and religion, as independent enterprises, in the twenty‐first century.
- Subjects
MODERNITY; DISILLUSIONMENT; PHILOSOPHERS; WILLIAMS, Rowan, 1950-; RELIGION; SOCIAL history; SPIRITUALITY; ORTHOPEDIC apparatus
- Publication
Zygon: Journal of Religion & Science, 2019, Vol 54, Issue 4, p1022
- ISSN
0591-2385
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/zygo.12554