46 research outputs found
Is Secularism History?
In recent years, the intellectual tide has moved strongly against the kind of secular thinking that characterized Gellnerâs work. Whether couched in terms of postcolonialism, multiculturalism, genealogy, global understanding, political theology, or the revival of normative, metaphysical and openly religious perspectives, todayâs postsecular and even anti-secular mood in social theory seems to consign Gellnerâs project to the dustbin of history: a stern but doomed attempt to shore up western liberal rationalism. Under some revisionary lights, it has even become pointless to distinguish flexible secular thinking which still retains some firm âbottom linesâ from what is routinely portrayed as rampant ideological secularism. Unconvinced by key assumptions and motivations on this terrain, I reactivate Gellnerâs essential concerns and propositions around secularity and secularism, feeding these into the current debates. Whilst Gellnerâs stringent, unrivalled exposure of intellectual cant continues to be hugely valuable, and his sense of the utter historicity of social life and thought indispensable, Gellnerâs critical positivism could not, by his own admission, produce a coherent cultural politics.</jats:p