Habermas and Theology
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:18th May '06
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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- Hardback£72.00(9780521862660)
This book draws upon the work of Habermas to suggest a model for public religious debate.
How can the world's religious traditions debate with each other within the public sphere? This book shows the importance for theologians of Habermas' approaches to this question. It argues that rather than suspending their deep reasoning to facilitate debate, religious traditions need to make their reasoning public, possibly using 'scriptural reasoning'.How can the world's religious traditions debate within the public sphere? In this book, Nicholas Adams shows the importance of Habermas' approaches to this question. The full range of Habermas' work is considered, with detailed commentary on the more difficult texts. Adams energetically rebuts some of Habermas' arguments, particularly those which postulate the irrationality or stability of religious thought. Members of different religious traditions need to understand their own ethical positions as part of a process of development involving ongoing disagreements, rather than a stable unchanging morality. Public debate additionally requires learning each other's patterns of disagreement. Adams argues that rather than suspending their deep reasoning to facilitate debate, as Habermas suggests, religious traditions must make their reasoning public, and that 'scriptural reasoning' is a possible model for this. Habermas overestimates the stability of religious traditions. This book offers a more realistic assessment of the difficulties and opportunities they face.
'This clear, cogent, well-documented book has a value beyond providing a judicious assessment of the strengths and weaknesses in the thought of a major contemporary philosopher.' The Heythrap Journal
'This study is a welcome theological appreciation and critique of the work of the influential German philosopher Jürgen Habermas examining his 'communicative action' and 'discourse ethics' theories. It also addresses the narratives of intellectual and social history ofthe West which underwrite these ideas.' European Journal of Theology
'…this is a book that critical theologians, post-liberal theologians, and philosophers of religion will find both clarifying and provocative.' Scott T Kline, St. Jerome's University in the University of Waterloo, Canada
ISBN: 9780521681148
Dimensions: 215mm x 149mm x 17mm
Weight: 330g
278 pages