The "New Atheist" movement of recent years has put the
science-versus-religion controversy back on the popular cultural
agenda. Anti-religious polemicists are convinced that the application
of the new sciences of the mind to religious belief gives them the
final weapons in their battle against irrationality and superstition.
What used to be a trickle of research papers scattered in specialized
scientific journals has now become a torrent of books, articles, and
commentary in the popular media pressing the case that the cognitive
science of religion can finally fulfill the enlightenment dream of
shrinking religion into insignificance, if not eliminating it
altogether. James W. Jones argues that these claims are demonstrably
false. He notes that cognitive science research is religiously
neutral; it can be deployed in many different ways in relation to the
actual belief in and practice of religion: to undermine it, to simply
study it, and to support it. These different approaches, Jones
suggests, reflect the background assumptions and viewpoints brought to
the interpretation of the data. The goal of this book is not to defend
either a general religious outlook or a particular religious
tradition, but to make the case that while there is much to learn from
the cognitive scientific study of religion, attempts to use it to
"explain" religion are exaggerated and misguided. Drawing on
scientific research and logical argument _Can Science Explain
Religion? _directly confronts the claims of these debunkers of
religion, providing an accessibly written, persuasive account of why
they are not convincing.
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The Cognitive Science Debate
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780190249403
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter