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Against fundamentalism: the silence of the Divine in the work of Karen Armstrong

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posted on 2014-01-01, 00:00 authored by Petra BrownPetra Brown
Three and a half centuries after the treaty of Westphalia ended the bloody religious wars in Europe, religious zealots are again threatening to undo the progress of Western civilised society, the achievements of science, the Enlightenment and liberal democracy. Such is the charge of the 'new atheist' movements of which Michael Onfray is but one example. Onfray's self-confessed task is to rekindle the Enlightenment, to shine 'Atheology's dazzling light' on the tyranny and darkness of monotheism. And in just 219 pages, Onfray exposes 4,000 years of evil and darkness perpetrated by the three monotheistic religions-or so his Atheist Manifesto claims (2007: 219).
It is the new atheists' rejection of the Enlightenment principle of toleration that prompted Karen Armstrong to write her book The Case for God. The Case for God is an argument and demonstration that all forms of fundamentalism represent a 'defiantly unorthodox form of faith that frequently misrepresents the tradition it is trying to defend' (2009: 7). As a modem twentieth century movement, fundamentalist movements are essentially pragmatic, 'modem, innovative, and modernizing' and have a symbiotic relationship 'with an aggressive liberalism or secularism' (Armstrong 2000: 178).

History

Title of book

Secularisations and their debates: perspectives on the return of religion in the contemporary west

Volume

5

Series

Sophia studies in cross-cultural philosophy of traditions and cultures

Chapter number

9

Pagination

153 - 170

Publisher

Springer

Place of publication

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

2211-1107

ISBN-13

9789400771161

Language

eng

Publication classification

B1 Book chapter

Copyright notice

2014, Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht

Extent

12

Editor/Contributor(s)

D Nickelson, M Sharpe

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