Abstract
Abstract. Instead of focusing my remarks on John Caiazza's interesting and important thesis about the way in which modern technology is drastically secularizing our culture today, I examine the frame within which he sets out his thesis, a frame I regard as seriously flawed. Caiazza's argument is concerned with the broad range of religion/science/technology issues in today's world, but the only religion that he seems to take seriously is what he calls “revealed religion” (Christianity). His consideration of religion is thus narrow and cramped, and this makes it difficult to assess properly the significance of what he calls techno‐secularism. I suggest that employing a broader conception of religion would enable us to see more clearly what is really at stake in the rise of techno‐secularism. Instead of defining the issues in the polarizing terms of revealed religion versus secularity, I argue for a more integrative approach in which concepts are developed that can bring together and hold together major religious insights and themes with modern scientific thinking. If, for example, we give up the anthropomorphism of the traditional idea of God as creator and think of God as simply creativity, it becomes possible to integrate theological insights with current scientific thinking and to formulate the issues posed by the rise of techno‐secularism in a more illuminating way. This in turn should facilitate effective address of those issues.
Keywords
God as mystery,
revealed religion,
science versus religion,
Christian religion,
God as creativity,
techno‐secularism,
double‐truth problem,
anthropomorphism,
creativity,
God as creator,
scientific cosmology,
bridge concepts,
revealed knowledge,
evolutionary theory,
integrative thinking
How to Cite
Kaufman, G.,
(2005) “TECHNO‐SECULARISM AND “REVEALED RELIGION”: SOME PROBLEMS WITH CAIAZZA'S ANALYSIS”,
Zygon: Journal of Religion and Science 40(2),
323–334.
doi: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9744.2005.00665.x
Rights
© 2024 The Author(s).