ABSTRACT

 This book explores the contribution to recent developments in post-secularism, philosophical realism and utopianism made by key thinkers in the Hegelian tradition. It challenges dominant assumptions about what the relationship between religion and our so-called "secular age" should be that have sought to reduce or even eliminate religiosity from the public sphere. It draws upon utopian thinkers within the Hegelian tradition whose work has challenged this narrow secularism. In particular it explores the importance of philosophical transcendence to Hegelian and post-Hegelian religious, social and political theorising. This includes philosophers whose thinking is sympathetic or at least compatible with transcendence (such as Hegel, Taylor, Bhaskar and Bloch) but also those who have a reputation for rejecting transcendence and instead embracing immanence and even atheism (Feuerbach, Marx and Engels). By drawing on the utopian content of these thinkers it seeks to shed new light on the importance religious ideas have played in a range of philosophical positions within the broadly Hegelian tradition from theism, idealism, materialism and atheism to new ideas, especially new research on Hegel's so-called "panentheism".

The book will be of interest to those working in the areas of post-secularism and utopian studies. It should also be of interest to academics and students of the recent turn within Critical Realism to "meta-reality" and its implications for Hegelianism and Marxism.

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

Post-secularism, utopia and reality

chapter 2|32 pages

Re-enchanting reality

Depth realism, ethical naturalism and transcendence

chapter 4|20 pages

Transcendent and immanent approaches to the “self”

Marcel Gauchet and Charles Taylor

chapter 5|40 pages

Freedom, rationality and God

Hegelian dialectical historical panentheism

chapter 6|46 pages

From transcendence to immanence

The anthropological and materialist utopia of Ludwig Feuerbach

chapter 7|46 pages

Atheistic metaReality?

Historical materialism and Ernst Bloch's philosophy of the “not yet”

chapter 8|8 pages

Conclusion

Post-materialist metaReality