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Christianity in the democracies of the "first" world has been declining in power, popularity and prestige for a century. However, many commentators, social scientists as well as church leaders, try to minimize the extent of this change. They maintain that religious sentiment remains strong despite declining levels of church involvement, and insist that secularization is an academic myth. In this robust defence of the secularization paradigm, Bruce elaborates just what Weber, Durkheim, Berger and Wilson thought was happening to religion in the West, and responds to critics of this concept. Specific topics covered include the significance of New Age spirituality, the influece of eastern religions on the West, the impact of science, the charismatic movement, religion and politics in the USA, and the future of religion. Bruce concludes the old orthodoxy was right: cultural diversity, in egalitarian and liberal democracies that place the individual above the community, undermines religious belief. Drawing on a diverse range of international examples, and written by one of the foremost sociologists of religion working today, God is Dead moves the debate about secularization forward. It will be an invaluable resource for students of sociology of religion, modern religion, Christianity, new religious movements and religion and culture. - Back cover.
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1
God Is Dead: Secularization in the West (Religion and Modernity)
July 2002, Blackwell Publishers
in English
0631232745 9780631232742
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God Is Dead: Secularization in the West
April 1, 2002, Blackwell Publishing Limited
Paperback
in English
0631232753 9780631232759
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"If argument in the social sciences is to be useful rather than merely entertaining, it must treat competing positions in their own terms and as fairly as possible."
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First Sentence
"If argument in the social sciences is to be useful rather than merely entertaining, it must treat competing positions in their own terms and as fairly as possible."
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