HISTORY,BELIEF AND IMAGINATION IN CHARLES TAYLOR'S A SECULAR AGE |
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Authors: | GRAHAM WARD |
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Institution: | School of Arts, Histories & Cultures, The University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, UKgraham.ward@manchester.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | In this essay I explore, from a theologian's perspective, two questions which arise from the Taylor's development of a genre addressing two quite different audiences: the social scientists and the theologians. In particular, it examines the relationship between theology and history and the relationship between believing, an act of faith and the imaginary. While accepting the conditions for believing in the age of enchantment differ from those in a secular and disenchanted age, the essay concludes by questioning whether an act of faith was any less difficult and by pointing out that if it was less difficult then theologically we need a more nuanced account of the relationship between God and history. |
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