1 / 32

“le 21e si è cle sera religieux ou ne sera pas .”

Andr é Malraux predicted that the 21 st century would be the century of religions, meaning not only the revival of tolerant faith but also of fanatically violent conflicts. “le 21e si è cle sera religieux ou ne sera pas .”. Oh Shit!.

dacton
Download Presentation

“le 21e si è cle sera religieux ou ne sera pas .”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. André Malraux predicted that the 21st century would be the century of religions, meaning not only the revival of tolerant faith but also of fanatically violent conflicts

  2. “le 21e siècle sera religieux ou ne sera pas.”

  3. Oh Shit!

  4. “The re-emergence of religious discourse” writes Sara Maitland, “seems to have caught many of us on the hop: baffled, irritated and uncomprehending.”

  5. The reasons for this religious comeback are manifold. It expresses both renewed individual quests for meaning in a secularized, materialistic world and a more collective search for identity in a world engaged in the uncertainties and insecurities of globalization and diversity

  6. Those, not schooled early in critical thinking, seem unable to escape from the mind-numbing cancerous grip of dogma hard-wired in childhood it becomes a necessary and/or sufficient crutch – to be defended at all costs.

  7. There are probably many issues that underlie the apparent increase in acceptance of religious dogma which specialises in sowing complacent mental security that we seem to see in the 21st Century

  8. We must now consider very seriously the possibility that these issues may be the fundamental cause of the 21st century resurgence of acceptance by very many of the complacent mental security that religion specialises in.)

  9. André Malraux, with his well-known intelligence and pessimism, said that the 21 st century would be the century of religions, meaning not only the revival of tolerant faith but also of fanatically violent conflicts

  10. Acrutch so impertand that there are also safeguars built Ege threats re aposasy and fear in

  11. In the 1960s, when secularism was seen by many as inevitable, part of the unstoppable march of progress, and organized religious communities appeared to be sidelined as a political force, especially in the Western world, Malraux - French writer and minister of Culture challenged that orthodoxy, declaring in oracular fashion that “the twenty-first century will be either religious or will not be”

  12. Nor can that seduction sustain itself indefinitely within the West, if the West is not to commit demographic suicide. Religious conviction is now the primary culture-shaping agent in many parts of the world, from the favellas of Brazil to the forests of Africa to the teeming

  13. Malraux’s view seems to have been confirmed in much of the world today: Western Europe excepted, religion has made a strong comeback.

  14. “The re-emergence of religious discourse” writes Sara Maitland, “seems to have caught many of us on the hop: baffled, irritated and uncomprehending.”

  15. For over 250 years, Western democratic thinking has argued, and even fought for, the secularization of the public domain and the political arena... By the second half of the last century, indeed, one might have thought the battle was won...

  16. What I see instead is a faltering, a loss of faith, in the whole Enlightenment project”

  17. The French literary gadfly, André Malraux, once shocked (shocked!) the devoutly secular French professoriate. Like other former Marxists, Malraux instinctively understood that the 20th century's lethal flirtations with utopian politics had left deep scars — including a diminished sense of human dignity.

  18. While some have welcomed this development as a necessary counterbalance to the excesses of materialism and individualism, others have warned that this religious revival would subvert universal values, sow particularist and divisive attachments, and trigger a broader backlash.

  19. Many people have responded, in short, with the same alarm with which they greeted Samuel Huntington¡¯s controversial thesis on the lasting power of and inevitable ¡°clash¡± between the world¡¯s major civilizations.

  20. The reasons for this religious comeback are manifold. It expresses both renewed individual quests for meaning in a secularized, materialistic world and a more collective search for identity in a world engaged in the uncertainties and insecurities of globalization and diversity

  21. Only religious convictions, Malraux suggested, were capable of lifting our eyes to a nobler horizon of human possibility.

  22. In some instances, the reemergence of religion also reflects in part the failure of the states, especially in the developing world, to provide and guarantee fundamental human rights for the majority of their populations.

  23. As political scientist Vali Nasr has phrased it: “There is a direct correlation between the scope and nature of religious activism and the decline of the secular state as a functioning political system and as an intellectual construct....

  24. In Kemalist Turkey, Pahlavi Iran... secularism never permeated deep into society... and with little to show in the form of veritable development, the values that sustained these states came under attack”.

  25. Only religious convictions, Malraux suggested, were capable of lifting our eyes to a nobler horizon of human possibility.”

  26. We must now consider very seriously the possibility that these issues may be the fundamental cause of the 21st century resurgence of acceptance by very many of the complacent mental security that religion specialises in.)

  27. Thus we might be able to understand why those, not schooled in critical thinking, are unable to escape from the mind-numbing ubiquitous cancerous grip of irrational dogma,- hard wired in childhood and possibly - for the vast majority of the human race – necessary and/or sufficient crutch. .

  28. While some have welcomed this development as a necessary counterbalance to the excesses of materialism and individualism, others have warned that this religious revival would subvert universal values, sow particularist and divisive attachments, and trigger a broader backlash. Many people have responded, in short, with the same alarm with which they greeted Samuel Huntington’s controversial thesis on the lasting power of and inevitable clash between the world’s major civilizations.

  29. The French literary gadfly, André Malraux, once shocked (shocked!) the devoutly secular French professoriate by observing that "the 21st century will be religious, or it will not be." Like other former Marxists, Malraux instinctively understood that the 20th century's lethal flirtations with utopian politics had left deep scars — including a diminished sense of human dignity.

More Related