The Pragmatics of Defining Religion

Contexts, Concepts and Contests

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This volume promotes a pragmatic, anti-essentialist and anti-hegemonic approach to the problem of the definition of religion. It argues that definitions of religion are context-bound strategies for pursuing a variety of purposes, extra-academic as well as academic. Religions being immensely varied, complex and multi-functional phenomena, they need to be studied by several academic disciplines from many different perspectives. It is, therefore, legitimate and useful that many definitions of religions are developed. The volume has contributions from scholars in Philosophy of Religion, the Comparative Study of Religions, Anthropology of Religion, Sociology of Religion and Psychology of Religion. It has chapters on the polemics of defining religion in modern contexts, the history of the concept of religion, and the methodology of its definition; it includes several definition proposals.

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Preliminary Material
Seiten: i–vii
Preface
Seiten: ix–x
Notes on the Contributors
Seiten: xi–xvii
The Politics of Defining Religion in Secular Society
From a Taken-for-Granted Institution to a Contested Resource
Seiten: 23–40
Religion as Claim
Social and Legal Controversies
Seiten: 41–72
Religion as Memory
Reference to Tradition and the Constitution of a Heritage of Belief in Modern Societies
Seiten: 73–92
Paradoxes
An Essay on the Object of the Psychology of Religion
Seiten: 93–122
Shifting Cargoes
Ernst Troeltsch on the Study of Religion
Seiten: 149–171
THE SACRED in the Social Sciences
On the Definition of Religion by the Année Sociologique Group
Seiten: 173–206
Psychologists Define Religion
Patterns and Prospects of a Century-Long Quest
Seiten: 207–224
To Define or not to Define
THE PROBLEM OF THE DEFINITION OF RELIGION
Seiten: 245–265
Intuiting Religion
A case for Preliminary Definitions
Seiten: 267–284
The Third Bank of the River
Play, Methodological Ludism and the Definition of Religion
Seiten: 285–312
The Definition of Religion
Squaring the Circle
Herausgeber: Peter Byrne
Seiten: 379–396
What is Religion?
Seiten: 397–408
Religion as the Realization of Faith
The Conceptualization of Religion in Relational Psychoanalysis
Von: Zock Hetty
Seiten: 433–459
Contexts, Concepts & Contests
Towards a Pragmatics of Defining ‘Religion’
Seiten: 463–516
Index of Names
Herausgeber: H. G. Kippenberg und E.T. Lawson
Seiten: 517–521
Index of Subjects
Herausgeber: H. G. Kippenberg und E.T. Lawson
Seiten: 522–543
Jan G. Platvoet, Ph.D. (1982), Utrecht University, is currently Senior Lecturer in the Comparative Studies of Religions at Leiden University and Vice-President of the African Association for the Study of Religions. He has published on the traditional religion of the Akan of Southern Ghana, the Study of Religions in Africa, spirit possession, the study of rituals, and the history and methodology of the Science of Religions, particularly in the Netherlands. Apart from articles, his publications include Pluralism and Identity: Studies in Ritual Behaviour (Brill, 1995) and The Study of Religions in Africa: Past, Present, Prospects. (Roots & Branches, 1996).
Arie L. Molendijk, Ph.D. (1991), Leiden University, currently holds a post-doctoral position at the Leiden Theological Faculty and is researching the emergence of the science of religion in the Netherlands at the end of the nineteenth century. His main research interest concerns the history of 19th and 20th century theology and philosophy in Germany and the Netherlands. Main publications: Zwischen Theologie und Soziologie: Ernst Troeltschs Typen der christlichen Gemeinschaftsbildung: Kirche, Sekte, Mystik (Gütersloh 1996) and Religion in the Making: The Emergence of the Sciences of Religion (Brill, 1998).
University libraries; scholars in Philosophy of Religion; History of Religions; the Comparative Study of Religions; Anthropology of Religions; Sociology of Religion; Psychology of Religion; especially those interested in the history and methodology of the various disciplines of the academic study of religions, in the semantic history of the concept of ‘religion’, and in History of Ideas.
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