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Palgrave Macmillan

Theism and Atheism in a Post-Secular Age

  • Book
  • © 2017

Overview

  • Winner of the Farabi International Award 2017 and shortlisted for the BSA Philip Abrams Memorial Prize
  • Connects the work of de Botton and Dawkins to the ideas of philosophers such as Peter Sloterdijk and Hans Blumenberg
  • Explores the theological roots of modern atheisms
  • Challenges the dichotomies of reason versus faith or ‘the sacred’ versus ‘the secular’

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Table of contents (11 chapters)

  1. Prometheanism

  2. Pilgrim and Tourist Atheism

  3. Beyond Prometheanism

Keywords

About this book

This book examines the post-secular idea of ‘religion for non-believers’. The new form of unbelief which is dubbed as ‘tourist atheism’ is not based on absolute rejection of religion as a ‘dangerous illusion’ or ‘mere prejudice’. Tourist atheists instead consider religion as a cultural heritage and a way of seeking perfection. What are the origins of these new forms of atheism? What are the implications of the emergence of a type of atheism which is more open toward religious teachings, rituals, arts, and world views? Hashemi argues that public intellectuals must consider that it is a sign of a post-secular age in which believers and non-believers go beyond mere tolerance and engage in a creative process of co-practice and co-working.

Reviews

“The idea that science and religion have been in perennial conflict is a relatively recent myth that has fuelled arrogance and incomprehension on both sides of the divide. This much has been known to historians and philosophers of science and religion for decades. Morteza Hashemi deftly deploys this knowledge to demonstrate why a pragmatic reconciliation of the two sides should be centre stage in future discussions of social theory, sociology and, indeed, the everyday conduct of social life. In the process, Hashemi provides a long overdue proper contextualisation of atheism as a social phenomenon.” (Steve Fuller, Auguste Comte Professor of Social Epistemology, University of Warwick, UK)

“In this original book, Dr Morteza Hashemi challenges one of the core presuppositions of modern social and political thought; namely, the self-positing nature of its critique of religion. By looking at a variety of sociological, philosophical and historical sources, he uncovers the most dramaticof modern inversions: the ‘Promethean’ view that ‘man’ is to replace ‘god’ as the ultimate source of human morality. At a time of reductive academic specialisation and oppositional ways of thinking, this book is an invitation to reflect on the continuities and discontinuities between secular and religious worldviews.” (Daniel Chernilo, Professor of Social and Political Thought, Loughborough University, UK, and University Diego Portales, Chile)

Authors and Affiliations

  • University of Warwick , Coventry, United Kingdom

    Morteza Hashemi

About the author

Morteza Hashemi is a visiting research fellow at the University of Warwick, UK, and a social researcher in post-secularism and technology

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