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Paperback Why I Am Not a Secularist Book

ISBN: 0816633320

ISBN13: 9780816633326

Why I Am Not a Secularist

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Philosophy/Political Science Challenges the limitations of traditional secularism-now in paperback! Religion's influence in American politics is obvious in recent debates about school prayer,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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From its title, i wished for better

I was disappointed that for me, the title "Why i am not a Secularist" only covered the introduction and first chapter of the book. The other 6 chapters could have free standing essays, barely connected to the first few by a few sentences here and there. I probably would not have purchased the book had i known it was a collection of essays. By the title, Connolly, who admits that he is a secular liberal, declares himself not to be a secular-ist, in the sense of a dogmatic, close minded person who will not be happy until every vestige of religiosity is removed from the public square. It is refreshing that Connolly makes this admission, rather than pretending that he has no ideology, only his adversaries do. He tries to create a space where dialogue can occur between secularists and religionists. He does so partly out of concern for his own side, the secularists, because he thinks that the religionists have 'stolen' the visceral, passionate side to many public arguments, while liberals are then 'stuck' with the merely rational arguments, although this is at best a backhanded compliment to the religious. Connolly, citing John Mill and others, shows how the enlightenment did develop, only could have developed, and still lives off of the moral capital, of the Christendom it replaced. In chapter 6, entitled "An Ethos of Engagement," Connolly proposes various exercises which he hopes would create better dialogue between secularists and religionists, rather than the dialogue of the deaf which we now have. He calls for more openness, to admitting that some or all of your own beliefs are contestable and desanctifiable. Fine. But then on pp. 146-147, he gives only one example, a lengthy description of how one who began the engagement rock solid against assisted suicide could become more 'open' to it, until you are positively for assisted suicide. No examples of anyone entertaining liberal positions transcending them to become more conservative. Lest one doubt Connolly's left credentials, there are extended chapters against capital punishment and William Bennett, not to say the former for the latter! If you can find this in a library, read the introduction and first chapter; the rest is predictable liberal micro-politics. However, it behooves Western religionists to sympathize more with its 'child', enlightened secularism, and their mutual grandchildren, the physical sciences, representative democracy, the use of reason and not blind fideism. And it behooves Western secularists to be more appreciate of Western religionists, who are of a benign variety and who have long given up the idea of forcibly controlling those area of society properly secular, as mandated in the Catholic church since the Second Vatican Council in the 1960's, so as better to understand and withstand a culture which makes no such concessions, like Islam.

a great antidote to cynicism

Connolly once again provokes and inspires. This leading political theorist and recent winner of the prestigious Lippincott Award for his classic Terms of Political Discourse shows in this book why the impasse between secularists and theistic thinking can best be overcome through a cultivation of a new kind of pluralist enagement with others. This is a breakthrough we've all been waiting for. "Heaven is a place, a place where nothing ever happens."
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