2012
DOI: 10.1017/s0034412512000327
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A phenomenological challenge to ‘enlightened secularism’

Abstract: This article challenges Philip Kitcher's recent proposals for an ‘enlightened secularism’. I use William James's theory of the emotions and his related discussion of ‘temperaments’ to argue that religious and naturalistic commitments are grounded in tacit, inarticulate ways that one finds oneself in a world. This indicates that, in many cases, religiosity and naturalism are grounded not in rational and evidential considerations, but in a tacit and implicit sense of reality which is disclosed through phenomenol… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
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References 33 publications
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