On the Road to Atheism -- Again


Atheism Again
Kelly Baker


Speaking of Faith has a podcast on entitled Beyond the Religion-Atheism Divide, in which Krista Tippett interviews Harvey Cox, Jr., a Harvard Divinity School Professor, on the current fad in books on atheism (see my previous post) as well as reflection on his work on secularism. The conversation highlights the problem between dividing the religious and non-religious so sharply. The podcast is described:

In 1965, a young Harvard professor became the best-selling voice of secularism in America with his book The Secular City. He sees the old thinking in the "new atheism" of figures like Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens. The either/or debates between religion and atheism, he says, obscure the truly interesting interplay between faith and other forms of knowledge that is unfolding today.

One of the main critiques of these recent works in “new atheism” is the occlusion of nuanced ways that religion impacts our world in a myriad of ways rather than just being the root of violence or hatred as some authors suggest. Additionally, Tracy Fessenden’s new book, Culture and Redemption provides a stunning look at the foundations of secularism and how the religious impacts the process of secularization. (Fessenden’s book is highlighted in this post).

Comments

Unknown said…
Interesting post. In fact, the new atheism has a broad streak of anti-intellectualism running through it and is currently capitalizing on the rush to blame religion for all the world's ills. Yet many within its ranks seem to be ignorant of the contributions that atheism (in the forms of Lenin-Stalinism, Maoism, Polpotism, etc.) have provided to the chronicles of humanity's inhumanity to humanity.

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