ABSTRACT

We all know what religion is - or do we? Confronted with religious pluralism and cultural diversity, it manifests itself in many forms. What is Religion? serves not only as an introduction to the different belief systems flourishing throughout the modern world, but asks us to consider how the very boundaries of faith might be drawn now and in the future. How might religion interact with political ends, or permeate culture, society and everyday life? Is the post-secular world in thrall to 'religions' of its own kind - materialism, humanism, medicine, science? And what logic separates 'common-sense' or academic knowledge from the immutable but unstable boudaries of faith? Which is the more certain? What does it mean to believe?
Combining clear accounts of contemporary global religious practice with an incisive philosophical interrogation of the dynamics and aims of belief, What is Religion? offers a fresh and wide-ranging introduction to the perennial human questions of ritual, faith, ethics and salvation.

chapter 1|8 pages

Can religion be defined?

chapter 2|13 pages

How is religion studied?

chapter 3|15 pages

Rituals

chapter 4|11 pages

Scriptures

chapter 5|16 pages

Behaviour

chapter 6|11 pages

Women

chapter 7|14 pages

Liberation

chapter 8|23 pages

Divisions within religions

chapter 9|11 pages

Why can religions not unite?

chapter 10|11 pages

Confessing a murder

chapter 11|8 pages

Is the world designed?

chapter 12|9 pages

What are we?

chapter 13|8 pages

Mind and brain

chapter 14|15 pages

Other belief systems

chapter 15|18 pages

The existence of God

chapter 16|11 pages

A definition of religion

chapter 17|13 pages

The future of religion