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Critically investigates the post-secular turn, definitions of 'religion' and our urgent need to escape the past.
Gregg Lambert examines two facets of the return to religion in the 21st century: the resurgence of overtly religious themes in contemporary philosophy and the global ‘post-secular’ turn that has been taking place since 9/11. He asks how these two ‘returns to religion’ can be taking place simultaneously, and explores the relationship between them.
Lambert reflects on statements of these returns from contemporary philosophers including Alain Badiou, John D. Caputo, Jacques Derrida and Jean-Luc Nancy. He discovers a unique – and forboding – sense of the term ‘religion’ that belongs exclusively to our contemporary perspective.
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Return Statements
Sapere aude?
‘What’s Love Got to do with it?’
noli mi tangere!
… ’tacitly, the caress, in a word, the Christian body’
Philosophical Fundamentalism Today
Living and Dying under the Double-Horizon of the Death of God
The Unprecedented Return of St. Paul
The Coming Community?
Conclusion: The Return Address – ‘Life itself’
Index
Description
Critically investigates the post-secular turn, definitions of 'religion' and our urgent need to escape the past.
Gregg Lambert examines two facets of the return to religion in the 21st century: the resurgence of overtly religious themes in contemporary philosophy and the global ‘post-secular’ turn that has been taking place since 9/11. He asks how these two ‘returns to religion’ can be taking place simultaneously, and explores the relationship between them.
Lambert reflects on statements of these returns from contemporary philosophers including Alain Badiou, John D. Caputo, Jacques Derrida and Jean-Luc Nancy. He discovers a unique – and forboding – sense of the term ‘religion’ that belongs exclusively to our contemporary perspective.