Kepler
Si certus es dubita
Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder
In "A Secular Age," Charles Taylor posits three senses in which modernity has become more secular: (1) disentanglement of state with religion, (2) lessening of popular observance of ritual and catechism, and (3) faith as one existential option of many rather than an all-encompassing reality. He makes the point that's it's really only Europe and the Anglophone world that have become secularized. In particular, the Islamic world is still non-secular in all three senses. The US he picks out as an interesting case where religiosity in sense (2) is famously high, despite the severance of (3) and the foundational rejection of (1). (I haven't gotten to his comments on China yet.)
I've always found a certain strangeness in the apparent delight some "old school" observers have with coarseness and punishment as if these are definitional of "real" faith. P. J. O'Rourke once wrote something atypically ham-fisted that new age religions were "for people too weak and cowardly for real religion." I guess there's merit in the idea that faith is a bedrock that you don't reject just because it's hard or inconvenient, but that's a long way from apparently glorying in harshness and punitive excess as "extra strength God."
The number of church going probably did. 50 years of bad catechesis will do that. Many stop attending as soon as the child gets confirmed (middle school age). Why bother? The ideas of sin and its consequences are missing from the "Church of Nice".
Yea - I'm old school.
In "A Secular Age," Charles Taylor posits three senses in which modernity has become more secular: (1) disentanglement of state with religion, (2) lessening of popular observance of ritual and catechism, and (3) faith as one existential option of many rather than an all-encompassing reality. He makes the point that's it's really only Europe and the Anglophone world that have become secularized. In particular, the Islamic world is still non-secular in all three senses. The US he picks out as an interesting case where religiosity in sense (2) is famously high, despite the severance of (3) and the foundational rejection of (1). (I haven't gotten to his comments on China yet.)
I've always found a certain strangeness in the apparent delight some "old school" observers have with coarseness and punishment as if these are definitional of "real" faith. P. J. O'Rourke once wrote something atypically ham-fisted that new age religions were "for people too weak and cowardly for real religion." I guess there's merit in the idea that faith is a bedrock that you don't reject just because it's hard or inconvenient, but that's a long way from apparently glorying in harshness and punitive excess as "extra strength God."
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