Atheism and Love in the Modern Era

Practicing Indifference

Colby Dickinson author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Publishing:15th May '25

£85.00

This title is due to be published on 15th May, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Atheism and Love in the Modern Era cover

A critique of religious belief that covers the decline of faith and the rise of love in the modern era.

Discussing the decline of faith and the rise of love in the modern era, Colby Dickinson proposes a critique of religious belief which addresses how a secular world can continue to mine religious traditions for their conceptual and emotional riches. Atheism and Love in the Modern Era argues that theism and atheism taken together can peel back the layers of abstraction, alienation, and disillusionment that always accompany our humanity in order to help us really see how it is to exist in this world. To illuminate this vision, Dickinson takes up the notion of love as a cultivation and practice of indifference as a letting go of one’s identity—a crucial concept that unites both religion and atheism through a concerted effort to detach from them both.
The book is organized into four sections, each situating the concept of love in relation to a distinct theme: the first outlines modern secularized versions of various religious concepts, such as technology in the place of miracles or art in the place of religious revelation. The second argues that in a pluralistic world, the actual, lived realities of various religious communities and persons defy the static categories and classifications grouped under the umbrella of ‘religion’. The third section discusses and defines non-absolute love. The fourth section discusses how atheism, in its critiques of religion, misses the significance of de-centring the act of love.

Dickinson elaborates his reflections through lucid engagement with a variety of thinkers including Žižek, Agamben, Irigaray, Derrida, Erich Fromm, Charles Taylor and Philip Kitcher. This is essential reading for those interested in popular debates around theism and atheism, as well as those concerned with the ways in which continental and analytic philosophy have addressed the continued significance of religious traditions.

Religion’s future, an idea provocative to atheists, is compellingly re-imagined as self-dissolution in the name of love and indifference, offering a highly attractive vision, even for those like me who long for us to leap over “necessary illusions” of absolute experiences like unconditional love -- Andrea Hurst, Professor of Philosophy, Nelson Mandela University, South Africa
Atheism and Love in the Modern Era is a courageous and thoughtful book: courageous, because it involves letting go of any and all claims to certainty and security; thoughtful, because it is written with a sensitivity to what such letting go actually involves. Dickinson writes with profound compassion for those who always and already find themselves excluded from our narratives of love, both religious and secular - if we can, anymore, sustain this distinction. His call for a love that is at once both less and so much more than we have imagined is a challenge to embrace detachment daily as a form of life. -- Robyn Horner, Professor of Theology, Australian Catholic University, Australia
This book offers an intriguing look at the decline of faith and the rise of love in contemporary societies. Colby Dickinson believes that recovering God as "non-absolute" - as a fragile, weak, and charitable God - will help us acknowledge what religious traditions can still offer and how we can live better existences. He works through Agamben, Žižek, and Irigaray, among others, to demonstrate that the future of atheism depends upon a complete indifference to religion , wheareas religion's future in letting go of its institutions and claims to power. -- Santiago Zabala, ICREA Research Professor of Philosophy, Pompeu Fabra University, Spain

ISBN: 9781350475380

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

208 pages