Secularism (Chapter 15) Flashcards
what is secularism?
The belief that religion should play no role in the running of the state, the affairs of government and of public life?
what was tony blairs quote on religion?
mr campbell (blairs most senior advisor) said “we don’t do god” to avoid debate
what is procedural secularism?
the role of the state is to take into account the interests of all its citizens and their institutions. This means that it should not give priority or preference to religion but treat it equally.
what is programmatic secularism?
the role of the state is to be purely secular, excluding religious belief from society
what is the secularisation thesis?
a term used by sociologists to describe the process of secularisation. It is defined as the growing number of people who profess no religious affiliation
can be hard to measure e.g. between 1900 - 2000 the number who had no religious affiliation doubled but the number who pray increased
secular positivism comte?
auguste comte
held the view civilised society develops from the theological (religious view of the world) to the metaphysical (abstract view of world)
said this would give way to secular positivism that scientific reasoning will take over from religion. Liberal idea that later influenced Freud and Dawkins
secular positivism freud?
said religion caused ‘neuroses’ (functional mental disorders such as severe anxiety) as religion belongs to an ‘infantile’ era of human development
freud used his psychoanalysis as evidence, in “the future of an illusion” freud invented an imaginary opponent for debate and concluded in every instant that in the end it would be science that would prevail
secular positivism hume?
said religion is mainly childish and practiced by uneducated people
“according to the natural progress of human thought, the ignorant must first entertain some grovelling and familiar notion of superior powers”
hume had no particular evidence to support this
what did freud mean by religion as the result of wish fulfilment?
freud received letter from a doctor in 1928 saying how he had became a christian after seeing a certain body that made him think of his mother.
from this freud said this was simply a case of the oedipus complex, and the experiene roused the doctor due to his longing for a mother, following his mothers death the doctor became angry against god who freud said resembled his own father and this later hallucionary event was just the doctor realising his own guilt
what did freud mean by religion as an infantile illusion?
in “the future of an illusion”
freud says religion is simply ‘a universal obsessional neurosis’ so it does some good for society as a child for society to grow up it should be abolished
how does keith ward critique freud?
freud is a reductionist, he wants to explain everything in material and technical terms.
ward doesn’t like this ‘the reduction of all this (million of people’s belief in religion) to blind purposeless blunderings of bits of matter seems desperately inadequate and superficial”
richard dawkins quote on religion?
“I am against religion because it teaches us to be satisfied with not understanding the world.”
how does dawkins reject stephen jay gould ?
golds idea is of non-overlapping magisterial (basically religion cannot be subject to human understand) link to hares bliks
dawkins rejects this as he says all things must be subject to rational enquiry
how does alister mcgrath criticise dawkins?
“The dawkins delusion” (2007)
reason and faith, mcgrath separates out reason and faith saying that reason is necessary in order to test true and false beliefs but ultimately faith makes a leap to the transcendent and sometimes making such a leap is simply un explainable
how does charles taylor object to the secularisation thesis?
taylor says we’ve developed ‘subtraction stories’ these are stories we now use to demonstrate the truth of secularisation by removing religion. Taylor calls these subtraction stories as ‘self-sufficient humanism’ but says they’re unsatisfactory as it gives too much importance to the individual and their private experiences but breaks down the idea of society
says that this human era is not experiencing god we shouldn’t abandon history