Dilemmas and Connections: Selected Essays

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Harvard University Press, Feb 7, 2011 - Philosophy - 414 pages

There are, always, more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in one’s philosophy—and in these essays Charles Taylor turns to those things not fully imagined or avenues not wholly explored in his epochal A Secular Age. Here Taylor talks in detail about thinkers who are his allies and interlocutors, such as Iris Murdoch, Alasdair MacIntyre, Robert Brandom, and Paul Celan. He offers major contributions to social theory, expanding on the issues of nationalism, democratic exclusionism, religious mobilizations, and modernity. And he delves even more deeply into themes taken up in A Secular Age: the continuity of religion from the past into the future; the nature of the secular; the folly of hoping to live by “reason alone”; and the perils of moralism. He also speculates on how irrationality emerges from the heart of rationality itself, and why violence breaks out again and again.

In A Secular Age, Taylor more evidently foregrounded his Catholic faith, and there are several essays here that further explore that faith. Overall, this is a hopeful book, showing how, while acknowledging the force of religion and the persistence of violence and folly, we nonetheless have the power to move forward once we have given up the brittle pretensions of a narrow rationalism.

 

Contents

Iris Murdoch and Moral Philosophy
3
A Gadamerian
24
Celan and the Recovery of Language
56
Nationalism and Modernity
81
Conditions of an Unforced Consensus
105
Democratic Exclusion and Its Remedies?
124
Religious Mobilizations
146
A Catholic Modernity?
167
DisenchantmentReenchantment
287
What Does Secularism Mean?
303
Die Blosse Vernunft Reason Alone
326
Perils of Moralism
347
What Was the Axial Revolution?
367
Notes
381
Credits
407
Copyright

The Future of the Religious Past
214

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About the author (2011)

Charles Taylor is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Philosophy at McGill University.

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