bookCambridge University Press eBooksSep 20, 2004Closed access

Sacred and Secular

Harvard University Press · University of Michigan

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Abstract

Seminal thinkers of the nineteenth century - Auguste Comte, Herbert Spencer, Emile Durkheim, Max Weber, Karl Marx, and Sigmund Freud - all predicted that religion would gradually fade in importance and cease to be significant with the emergence of industrial society. The belief that religion was dying became the conventional wisdom in the social sciences during most of the twentieth century. During the last decade, however, the secularization thesis has experienced the most sustained challenge in its long history. The traditional secularization thesis needs updating. Religion has not disappeared and is unlikely to do so. Nevertheless, the concept of secularization captures an important part of what is going…

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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Secularization
  • Politics
  • Sociology of religion
  • Secularism
  • Religious studies
  • Reading (process)
  • Sociology
  • Social science
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