Title: ❤[READ]❤ Religion and the Rise of Modern Culture (ND Erasmus Institute Books)
1MODERN
CULTURE
J
2Religion and the Rise of Modern Culture (ND
Erasmus Institute Books)
3Religion and the Rise of Modern Culture (ND
Erasmus Institute Books)
Sinopsis
Religion and the Rise of Modern Culture describes
and analyzes changing attitudes toward religion
during three stages of modern European culture
the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, and the
Romantic period. Louis Dupr233is an expert
guide to the complex historical and intellectual
relation between religion and modern culture.
Dupr233begins by tracing the weakening of the
Christian synthesis. At the end of the Middle
Ages intellectual attitudes toward religion
began to change. Theology, once the dominant
science that had integrated all others, lost its
commanding position. After the French Revolution,
religion once again played a role in
intellectual life, but not as the dominant force.
Religion became transformed by intellectual and
moral principles conceived independently of
faith. Dupr233explores this new situation in
three areas the literature of Romanticism
(illustrated by Goethe, Schiller, and
H246ldelin) idealist philosophy (Schelling) and
theology itself (Schleiermacher and
Kierkegaard). Dupr233argues that contemporary
religion has not yet met the challenge presented
by Romantic thought. Dupr2338217s elegant and
incisive book, based on the Erasmus Lectures he
delivered at the University of Notre Dame in
2005, will challenge anyone interested in
religion and the philosophy of culture.
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Religion and the Rise of Modern Culture (ND
Erasmus Institute Books)
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7Religion Books)
and
the
Rise
of
Modern
Culture
(ND
Erasmus
Institute
copy link in description
Religion and the Rise of Modern Culture describes
and analyzes changing
attitudes toward
8religion during three stages of modern European
culture the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, and
the Romantic period. Louis Dupr233is an expert
guide to the complex historical and intellectual
relation between religion and modern culture.
Dupr233begins by tracing the weakening of the
Christian synthesis. At the end of the Middle
Ages intellectual attitudes toward religion
began to change. Theology, once the dominant
science that had integrated all others, lost its
commanding position. After the French Revolution,
religion once again played a role in
intellectual life, but not as the dominant force.
Religion became transformed by intellectual and
moral principles conceived independently of
faith. Dupr233explores this new situation in
three areas the literature of Romanticism
(illustrated by Goethe, Schiller, and
H246ldelin) idealist philosophy (Schelling) and
theology itself (Schleiermacher and
Kierkegaard). Dupr233argues that contemporary
religion has not yet met the challenge presented
by Romantic thought. Dupr2338217s elegant and
incisive book, based on the Erasmus Lectures he
delivered at the University of Notre Dame in
2005, will challenge anyone interested in
religion and the philosophy of culture.