Beschreibung
This book facilitates a missing dialogue between the secular and the transsecular dimensions of human existence. It explores two kinds of limits of the secular: the inadequacies of its assumptions with respect to the total being of the human, and how it curbs the ontological sensibilities of the human. Kaustuv Roy argues that since secular reason of modernity can only represent the empirical dimension of existence, humans are forced to privatize the non-empirical dimension of being. It is therefore absent from the social, imaginary, as well as public discourse. This one-sidedness is the root cause of many of the ills facing modernity. Roy contends that a bridge-consciousness that praxeologically relates the secular and the non-secular domains of experience is the need of the hour.
Autorenportrait
Kaustuv Roy is professor of Philosophy and Sociology at Azim Premji University in Bangalore, India. He earned his Ph.D from Michigan State University and taught at Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, USA. His previous books includeTeachers in Nomadic Spaces andNeighborhoods of the Plantation: War, Politics and Education.
Inhalt
1. Introduction: Where Angels Fear.- 2. Concept Fetishism.- 3. The Saeculum.- 4. Cogitogenic Disorders.- 5. Not by Bread Alone.- 6. Formations of the Trans-secular.- 7. Metanoic Practice.- 8. Epilogue
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