Ernie:

Pow!  Terrific material.  This fits in perfectly with a project for myself

that I am starting to collect papers on, a project that looks closely at

"revelation," "prophecy," and the  meaning of "spirituality."


First there are current  projects to complete, and I don't expect to have

these projects finished before the end of 2018.  But looking ahead,

Charles Taylor's work seems to me to be very important.


After all, to discuss "religion" is also to discuss religious authority.

But how do you decide which religious traditions (or innovations)

have authority?  On what basis?  This question is crucial to

everything else.  We necessarily will reconstruct our values system

on some religious foundation  -even if future religion is party

a form of psychotherapy, partly a form of aesthetics, partly

a form of social organization, and partly pop philosophy

transmitted through the media and the Web. That is, in some

sense we are hard-wired for God / Goddess.  The forms this

takes can vary widely as can our awareness, but the effect

is inescapable.


Many thanks for passing along the Taylor article.



Billy


-------------------------



________________________________
From: radicalcentrism@googlegroups.com <radicalcentrism@googlegroups.com> on 
behalf of Centroids <drer...@radicalcentrism.org>
Sent: Wednesday, March 7, 2018 6:34 AM
To: Centroids Discussions
Subject: [RC] Science, Religion, and Secularism, Part XXI: Charles Taylor: A 
Secular Age (Part A)


The article I mentioned earlier. We are defined by what we can and can not 
question.

Science, Religion, and Secularism, Part XXI: Charles Taylor: A Secular Age 
(Part A)
http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2018/03/06/science-religion-and-secularism-part-xxi-charles-taylor-a-secular-age-part-a/

Science, Religion, and Secularism, Part XXI: Charles Taylor: A Secular Age 
(Part A) | The Partially Examined Life Philosophy Podcast | A Philosophy 
Podcast and 
Blog<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2018/03/06/science-religion-and-secularism-part-xxi-charles-taylor-a-secular-age-part-a/>
partiallyexaminedlife.com
Of the three elements in our series—science, religion, and secularism—science 
has probably received the most philosophical attention, at least in the 
contemporary context. Indeed, the constitution of a category, "philosophy of 
religion," presumes a sectioning-off of certain topics that have, historically, 
been integral


(via Instapaper<http://www.instapaper.com/>)

________________________________

Of the three elements in our series—science, religion, and secularism—science 
has probably received the most philosophical attention, at least in the 
contemporary context. Indeed, the constitution of a category, “philosophy of 
religion,” presumes a sectioning-off of certain topics that have, historically, 
been integral to philosophy. It presumes, in other words, a growing distance 
between religion and philosophy. This in turn is a result of the broadening and 
deepening of secularism, which has received very little philosophical attention 
until quite recently. What I mean is that there did not have to be a 
“philosophy of religion” in a society in which religious concepts had a 
normative and unproblematic status. It’s only when that status gets called into 
question that it begins to attract intensive discussion, and there can be such 
a thing as “philosophy of religion.” What existed beforehand, at least in the 
Islamic and Christian lands (which included most of the world’s Jewish 
population as well), would have been theology, an activity that presumes the 
truth of ideas (such as the existence of God, an afterlife, and revelation), 
which are up for grabs in the philosophy of religion. Just as religious 
societies have little use for a “philosophy of religion,” so too, secular 
societies would seem to have little use for a philosophy of secularism. In both 
cases, either religion or secularism has a “taken-for-granted” status that lets 
it fly under the radar, so to speak. It’s not only our answers, but our 
questions, that define us.

In future articles, I hope to get more precise about the term “religion,” as in 
previous articles I tried to do with the term “science.” “Religion” is a 
notoriously fuzzy term, and it’s difficult to think of any one characteristic 
that does not instantly call to mind counterexamples. It calls for some 
philosophical investigation that I haven’t done yet. Often I’ve used the term 
“theology” in place of “religion,” because at least with “theology” we know 
what we’re talking about: the intellectual—as opposed to the ritual, 
devotional, ethical, etc.—aspects of faith. In this article, I’d like to begin 
a historical-philosophical explanation of our third term, secularism. We’ll be 
investigating some of the high points of Charles Taylor’s book, A Secular 
Age<http://amzn.to/2CYOeO3>, a landmark exploration of secularism that won the 
Templeton Prize in 2007. Like Michael Allen Gillespie’s Theological Origins of 
Modernity<http://amzn.to/2FgAboH>, which we discussed in previous articles, 
it’s a good, rich, rewarding text, and can help us get a handle on secularism, 
which exercises so much influence in our time.

Taylor’s goal in A Secular Age is to historicize secularism—to show where it 
came from, how it’s changed over time, and what it means for us today. He wants 
us to see it as something that humans have built for themselves, something that 
has grown out of our own choices and agency, not a preexisting facet of the 
world or our experience. When we see secularism in this way, we cease to take 
it for granted. We become aware of it as something contestable, and contested, 
not to be equated simply with knowledge or the way things are or anything like 
that, but one human possibility among many. In other words, historicizing 
secularism is what allows there to be a philosophy of it. Taylor wants us to 
become aware of secularism in a way similar to how we’ve become aware of 
religion. This way, instead of secularism setting the agenda for scrutiny of 
other things, but not itself being a subject of scrutiny—an “unmoved mover,” if 
you will, in philosophy—it becomes available for scrutiny itself.

In order to do this, Taylor has to deflate what he calls “subtraction stories.” 
A subtraction story is one that presents secularism as the result of just 
subtracting away superstition, ignorance, authoritarianism, or something else 
irrelevant or pernicious. Once we clear away the fog of error, the truth 
becomes self-evident. Secularization is just life without the god-talk. So 
secularism becomes something natural, obvious, and given in experience, and 
therefore calling for no special consideration, explanation, or scrutiny. In 
this way the constructive stance involved in secularism—its history, so to 
speak; its status as one distinctive human posture among many—becomes obscure. 
Secularism involves subtraction, to be sure, but also addition. Taylor contends 
that subtraction stories obscure the positive, constructive elements of 
secularism by unduly privileging the negative, deconstructive elements.

In order to counter a subtraction story, one has to have a positive story to 
replace it.

Subtraction stories are very common in popularizations of science. They often 
sound something like this: “Once, in the old times, people worshipped the gods 
out of fear and ignorance. They didn’t know about physics and astronomy and 
biology, so they invented gods to explain things. Now, thankfully, we know 
better, and that’s the beauty of science.” Combined with the thesis that 
“science is just organized common sense,” we end up with a typical subtraction 
story. People start using their common sense when they stop worshipping the 
gods, hence getting rid of religion automatically promotes a sensible, 
scientifically informed society. Another subtraction blames the poverty and 
backwardness of the European Middle Ages on the Catholic Church. The Catholic 
Church knew that its power depended on inculcating fear and ignorance, so it 
suppressed knowledge in order to preserve itself. Once the power of the 
Catholic Church was broken, however, an age of reason dawned. The 
eighteenth-century French philosopher Denis Diderot was thinking along these 
lines when he quipped that "Men will never be free until the last king is 
strangled with the entrails of the last priest.” Subtract out priests and 
kings, and freedom is what you’re left with.

The problem with subtraction stories, Taylor argues, is that they treat 
secularism as a given, as the starting point of legitimate discussion, rather 
than seeing it as one human possibility among many. But it’s not enough for 
Taylor to simply point this out. In order to counter a subtraction story, one 
has to have a positive story to replace it. Historicizing secularism means 
giving it a history, and that’s what Taylor set out to do. Put differently, 
Taylor begins with the observation that, c. 1500, it was very difficult for a 
European to not believe in God, or to conceive of the scope of their life as 
circumscribed entirely by their bodily experience. God and other religious 
concepts were a felt, unproblematic reality in the daily life of tens of 
millions of people. Today, it is not at all difficult to not believe in God. 
There are plenty of atheists, and even the staunchest believer is aware of 
their faith as one possibility among many. The taken-for-granted quality of 
faith is no longer there. Probably more numerous than either staunch believers 
or committed atheists, are people for whom religion is just irrelevant. It’s 
not that they’re actively opposed to it, per se, but it’s just not a very big 
part of their lives. So, something important has changed between the years, c. 
1500 and c. 2000. What was it? When we understand this change, we’ll understand 
the history of secularism.

Before beginning our historical investigation, let’s define the object of our 
inquiry. What is secularism? Taylor gives four senses of the term that are 
relevant. The first is the oldest, derived from the Latin saeculum: the age, 
or, in other words, ordinary time. Taylor will have a lot to say about 
premodern conceptions of time, but for now the important thing is that the 
original sense of the secular is just the mundane, ordinary experience of time. 
Most, for some people perhaps all, of our lives are spent in secular time. This 
sense of the word “secular” survives in the Catholic Church’s designation of 
some clergy as “regular” and others as “secular.” The regular clergy live under 
a regula, or rule. They are the monks and nuns who take vows of total 
commitment to their church and order, and who are absorbed completely in their 
religious vocation. To use somewhat archaic terminology, they are set apart 
from “the world,” or from ordinary life. Secular clergy, on the other hand, are 
in “the world.” They are the priests who attend to the day-to-day operations of 
the church, without taking vows of total commitment or living under a monastic 
rule.

Another sense, what Taylor calls Secularity 1, refers to the emptying of public 
spaces of references to God and other religious concepts. (I realize that “God” 
and “religion” are not entirely synonymous, but “religion” is such a fuzzy 
term, and most “religions” do indeed involve God or gods, so it seems 
reasonably accurate. Hopefully I’ll be able to offer a more precise formulation 
in the future!) Religion is still a part of people’s lives and of society, 
perhaps even a very important part, but it’s seen as more appropriate for one’s 
private life. We all agree to set aside our personal religious views when we 
enter into a public space or undertake matters of public concern. Hence, while 
the prescriptions that go along with religion can still be authoritative for 
the individual, they no longer are for society as a whole, or within 
institutions that are not explicitly concerned with such references. Religion 
becomes a matter of personal choice, rather than public obligation, unlike in 
the ancient and medieval times.

Secularity 2 refers to the decline in religious involvement that follows upon 
its retreat from the public sphere. The reasons to be religious just aren’t as 
compelling to many people when religion is put into the same category as 
recreation, hobbies, charity work, and other voluntary societies or private 
practices. There seems to be something ineluctably social about religion, which 
its privatization erodes. There are still plenty of religious people, of 
course, but it’s a more embattled option under conditions of Secularity 2.

Secularity 3 refers to the emergence of exclusive humanism as a genuine option 
for many people. What Taylor means by exclusive humanism is a conception of the 
good that makes no reference to the transcendent, supernatural, supra-mundane, 
or other religious concepts. Human flourishing becomes not just an ethical goal 
(it was always that) but the exclusive and self-sufficient ethical goal. The 
idea that there is an ethical goal beyond or superior to this becomes regarded 
with some hostility. It seems to denigrate our this-worldly condition, or to 
distract attention away from its improvement. It was this sense of secularity 
that Karl Marx<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2013/01/30/ep70-marx/> alluded 
to when he complained that “religion is the opium of the masses.” If they could 
“wake up” by no longer being religious, they would become aware of the ways in 
which their flourishing is being thwarted. This kind of secularism is more 
intransigently anti-religious than the first two. There is a transition from 
the pluralism of Secularism 1 and 2 to the monism of Secularism 3.

Taylor sees these secularisms as stages along a continuous chain of 
development. Secularism 3 is already implicit in 2, and 2 in 1, so once the 
process gets started it acquires its own momentum, which can be difficult to 
reverse. This transition changes the conditions of belief. Whereas before it 
was difficult to enter a public space without encountering religion, one only 
rare does under conditions of Secularity 3. In consequence, belief becomes an 
embattled option just as unbelief had been previously. To believe then means to 
make a conscious decision, to cut against the grain, so to speak, of a society 
in which comprehension of and participation in transcendent realities becomes 
obscure, problematic, extraneous. There is a general falling away of commitment.

With the general aims of Taylor’s book, and some different senses of the term 
“secularism,” under our belt, we can begin the historical narrative. In the 
next article, we’ll explore Taylor’s description of the premodern mentality, 
which provides the backdrop for the narrative he wants to lay out, of the 
emergence of modern secularity.

This essay is part of a series; the previous essay can be found 
here<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2018/02/22/science-religion-and-secularism-part-xx-what-is-science-part-b/>.

Daniel Halverson is a graduate student studying the History of Science and 
Technology. He is also a regular contributor to the PEL Facebook page.

Image of Charles Taylor by Makhanets 
[GFDL<http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html> or CC BY-SA 
3.0<https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>], via Wikimedia 
Commons<https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3ACharles_Taylor.jpg>.

If you’re just beginning to follow this series, or would like a handy 
reference, here are links to the previous articles:

Part I: 
Introduction<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2017/08/31/science-religion-and-secularism-part-i-introduction/>

Part II: Ian Barbour—The Conflict 
Model<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2017/09/07/science-religion-and-secularism-part-ii-ian-barbour-the-conflict-model/>

Part III: Ian Barbour—The Independence 
Model<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2017/09/14/science-religion-and-secularism-part-iii-ian-barbour-the-independence-model/>

Part IV: Ian Barbour—The Dialogue 
Model<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2017/09/21/science-religion-and-secularism-part-iv-ian-barbour-the-dialogue-model/>

Part V: Ian Barbour—The Synthesis 
Model<https://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2017/10/05/science-religion-and-secularism-part-v-ian-barbour-the-synthesis-model/>

Part VI: John Hedley Brooke, Complexity 
Thesis<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2017/10/18/science-religion-and-secularism-part-vi-jonathan-hedley-brooke-complexity-thesis/>

Part VII: Plato and the Geometric Model of 
Knowledge<https://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2017/10/29/science-religion-and-secularism-part-vii-plato-and-the-geometric-model-of-knowledge/>

Part VIII: Arthur O. Lovejoy, the Great Chain of 
Being<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2017/11/02/science-religion-and-secularism-part-viii-arthur-o-lovejoy-the-great-chain-of-being/>

Part IX: Did Heliocentrism Knock Humanity off Its 
Perch?<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2017/11/09/science-religion-and-secularism-part-ix-did-heliocentrism-knock-humanity-off-its-perch/>

Part X: Thomas Paine and the Controversy over Extraterrestrial 
Life<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2017/11/16/science-religion-and-secularism-part-x-thomas-paine-and-the-controversy-over-extraterrestrial-life/>

Part XI: Arthur O. Lovejoy, the Great Chain of Being and Pre-Darwinian 
Biology<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2017/11/22/science-religion-and-secularism-part-xi-arthur-o-lovejoy-the-great-chain-of-being-and-pre-darwinian-biology/>

Part XII: Michael Allen Gillespie, Theological Origins of 
Modernity<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2017/11/30/science-religion-and-secularism-part-xii-michael-allen-gillespie-theological-origins-of-modernity/>

Part XIII: William of Ockham and the Origins of 
Nominalism<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2017/12/07/science-religion-and-secularism-part-xiii-william-of-ockham-and-the-origins-of-nominalism/>

Part XIV: Nominalism, Petrarch, and the Renaissance Origins of 
Humanism<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2017/12/14/science-religion-and-secularism-part-xiv-nominalism-petrarch-and-the-renaissance-origins-of-humanism/>

Part XV: A Fractured World: God, Humanity, and 
Nature<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2017/12/21/science-religion-and-secularism-part-xv-a-fractured-world-god-humanity-and-nature/>

Part XVI: Did Medieval Islamic Theology Subvert 
Science?<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2018/01/04/science-religion-and-secularism-xvi-did-medieval-islamic-theology-subvert-science/>

Part XVII: Galileo Goes to 
Jail?<https://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2018/01/11/science-religion-and-secularism-part-xvii-galileo-goes-to-jail/>

Part XVIII: Humanistic, Scientific, and Theistic Approaches to 
History<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2018/01/18/science-religion-and-secularism-part-xviii-humanistic-scientific-and-theistic-approaches-to-history/>

Part XIX: What Is Science? (Part 
A)<http://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2018/02/15/science-religion-and-secularism-part-xix-what-is-science-part-a/>

Part XX: What is Science? (Part 
B)<https://partiallyexaminedlife.com/2018/02/22/science-religion-and-secularism-part-xx-what-is-science-part-b/>

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