Fr. 236.00

Truth Claims in a Post-Truth World - Faith, Fact and Fakery

English · Hardback

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Description

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Drawing on debates from a multi-disciplinary perspective, this book examines what it means to offer a genuine sociological critique of religious faith, illiberalism and anti-secularism from a macro perspective. Arguing that as a discipline concerned with real issues in the social world, sociology should be at the forefront of any analysis of religious power and legitimacy, the author contends that much religious faith is fundamentally incompatible with any twenty-first-century society that seeks inclusive, utilitarian and humanistic principles as its goals.
With an emphasis on sociology, the effects of organised religion's overall decline in modern Western contexts are explored, while the troubling re-emergence or persistence of faith-based and other non-evidentiary perspectives is also discussed via debates around identity politics, postmodernism and multiculturalism. Through an analysis of the rise of irrational thinking in our politics and our entire social and cultural fabric, the book moves to conclude that religious beliefs and other forms of dogmatism are underpinned by powerful, influential and potentially dangerous ideological structures at various levels of society and that viable, secular alternatives to faith teachings ought to be nurtured in their place.

A critique of religion that advances modern, secular humanistic thought, Truth Claims in a Post-Truth World will appeal to scholars of sociology, social theory and philosophy with interests in religion, political thought, ethics and civil society.

List of contents

1. Oh, Your God! The Sociological Case Against Religious Faith  2. Morality and Society  3. Secularisation and the Necessity of Secularity  4. Campus Chaos: Postmodern Thought as Intellectual Crisis  5. The Rise of a New Orthodoxy: Woke "Justice" and the Sleep of Reason  6. Pardon the Expression: Islam, Media Representation and Censorship  7. Sociology and Its Special and General Theories of Relativism  Conclusion: The Persistence of Intuitions and the Fear of Knowledge

About the author

Erkan Ali is Lecturer at Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, China, and the author of Interpreting Visual Ethnography: Texts, Photos and the Construction of Sociological Meanings.

Summary

Drawing on debates from a multi-disciplinary perspective, this book examines what it means to offer a genuine sociological critique of religious faith and anti-secularism from a macro perspective.

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