"Religion in the Making" presents a profound exploration of the nature of religion and its role in human experience, based on the influential Lowell Lectures delivered by Alfred North Whitehead in 1926. A foundational work in process philosophy, this book examines how religious thought develops and transforms as it interacts with science, metaphysics, and logic. Whitehead challenges traditional conceptions by analyzing religion as a process of internalizing values and understanding the world's ultimate character.
The work is divided into four critical sections that trace the historical development of religion, the transition from communal rituals to individual belief, and the necessity of a rational foundation for faith. Whitehead famously argues that religion is what the individual does with his own solitariness, yet it remains inextricably linked to the universal structure of reality. By synthesizing philosophical rigor with spiritual inquiry, "Religion in the Making" offers a timeless perspective on how religion shapes-and is shaped by-the human quest for meaning and coherence in an ever-evolving universe. This text remains a vital resource for students of philosophy, theology, and the history of ideas.
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