Fortieth anniversary symposium: Science, religion, and secularity in a technological society : Culture and history : Essential partners in the conversation between religion and science
In: Zygon, Jg. 40 (2005), Heft 2, S. 335-350
Online
academicJournal
- print; 16; 8 ref
Zugriff:
In this essay I respond to John Caiazza's claim for the primacy of what he calls tecbno-secularism for understanding twentieth-century history. Using the examples of the Taiping Rebellion in nineteenth-century China and Zionism in twentieth-century Europe, I argue that the range of Caiazza's schema is confined solely to the Protestant West with little applicability to other national histories. I argue further for the lack of clarity and therefore the uselessness of the dichotomy of the secular and the religious for understanding human history. I claim instead that, while the category of technology and the institutions of religion are important determiners in human history, they need to be subsumed, without special status, within a broader set of interrelated factors called culture. I appeal for the academic study of science and religion to give primacy for the near future to the history of science and religion over both theology and science.
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Fortieth anniversary symposium: Science, religion, and secularity in a technological society : Culture and history : Essential partners in the conversation between religion and science
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Autor/in / Beteiligte Person: | SAMUELSON, Norbert M |
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Zeitschrift: | Zygon, Jg. 40 (2005), Heft 2, S. 335-350 |
Veröffentlichung: | Malden MA: Blackwell, 2005 |
Medientyp: | academicJournal |
Umfang: | print; 16; 8 ref |
ISSN: | 0591-2385 (print) |
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