The postsecular political philosophy of Jürgen Habermas : translating the sacred

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The postsecular political philosophy of Jürgen Habermas : translating the sacred

Dafydd Huw Rees

(Political philosophy now)

University of Wales Press, 2018

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Jurgen Habermas is arguably the world's most influential living philosopher - by introducing ideas such as the public sphere, constitutional patriotism, and the discourse theory of law and democracy, he has transformed modern political philosophy. But since 2001, Habermas's thought has taken an unexpected turn. This book is the first full-length treatment of Habermas's postsecular political philosophy, and critically analyses his new direction of thought. The author places the postsecular turn in the context of Habermas's long-standing commitment to developing a postmetaphysical account of morality, politics and human communication. The tension between secular liberal democracy and religious freedom is real, but there may be losses as well as gains to Habermas's quest to translate the sacred.

Table of Contents

List of Tables Introduction - At the Paulskirche 1. Sacred and Profane 2. Religion and Postmetaphysical Thinking 3. The Anthropic Problem 4. Rawls, Habermas and the Critique of Secularism 5. Postsecular Deliberative Democracy 6. Pyrrhic Translation Conclusion - Ethics and Metaphysics Notes Bibliography Index

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