The End(s) of Religion: A History of How the Study of Religion Makes Religion Irrelevant by Eric Bain-Selbo. New York: NY, Bloomsbury Academic, 2022. 278 pp.
In this volume, Eric
Bain-Selbo employs the word “End(s)” in the title to refer to two main concepts.
The first idea, which is presented in a methodical fashion, is the “end” or purpose
of religion in human society as interpreted and advocated by various
individuals in the last several centuries from philosophers to sociologists.
Thinkers discussed in the volume include Kant and Hegel (the
ethical/philosophical function of religion); Dukheim and Weber (the
sociological function of religion); Freud and Jung (the psychological function
of religion); and Eliade and Tillich (the existential function of religion). All
these reductionist approaches reduce religion to a particular goal, such as having
a set of rational principles, a social function, or a set of practices to cope psychologically
with life.
The other meaning of the
word “end” in the book refers to the the “demystification, marginalization, and
ultimately irrelevance and decline” of religion that we are experiencing today.
The author argues that the increasing secularization and decline of
institutional stereotypical religion can be attributed in various ways to the reductionist
approaches in the study of religion by these philosophers, psychologists, sociologists,
and scholars of religion. And there is no evidence that this trend will reverse
itself in the future.
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