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The neighbor in the self | open Democracy News Analysis - 0 views

  • The neighbor in the self James R Mensch Religions and States, even when apparently open, are subject to "auto-immune" reactions which make them turn against the other within. They need to make the effort to recognise the other as a constituent of themselves.
  • here is a famous passage in the Gospels, where a lawyer questions Jesus with regard to the command to love God with one's whole heart and to love ones neighbour `as oneself.' The lawyer asks, 'And who is my neighbour?'
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The dark (k)night of a postmodern world | open Democracy News Analysis - 0 views

  • The dark (k)night of a postmodern worldTina BeattieChristopher Nolan's The Dark Knight is a parable for our time that offers a bleak insight into the moral bankruptcy of democracy in a post-9/11 world, says Tina Beattie.
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faith & ideas | open Democracy News Analysis - 0 views

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    faith & ideas
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Between Pope and Prophet | open Democracy News Analysis - 0 views

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    Between Pope and Prophet\nFaisal Devji\nMuslims' response to Pope Benedict's address at Regensburg is a fresh chapter in the arrival of global Islam on the world's political stage, says Faisal Devji.
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Essays: 'The sacred and the human' by Roger Scruton | Prospect Magazine August 2007 iss... - 0 views

  • The resentment of the slave explains, for Nietzsche, the entire theological and moral vision of Christianity. Christianity owes its power to the resentment upon which it feeds: resentment which, because it cannot express itself in violence, remains turned against itself. Thus arises the ethic of compassion, the mortification of the flesh and the life-denying routines of the "slave morality." Christianity is a form of self-directed violence, which conceals a deep resentment against every form of human mastery.
  • And like Nietzsche, Girard sees the primeval condition of society as one of conflict. It is in the effort to resolve this conflict that the experience of the sacred is born. This experience comes to us in many forms—religious ritual, prayer, tragedy—but its true origin is in acts of communal violence. Primitive societies are invaded by "mimetic desire," as rivals struggle to match each other's social and material acquisitions, so heightening antagonism and precipitating the cycle of revenge. The solution is to identify a victim, one marked by fate as outside the community and therefore not entitled to vengeance against it, who can be the target of the accumulated bloodlust, and who can bring the chain of retribution to an end. Scapegoating is society's way of recreating "difference" and so restoring itself. By uniting against the scapegoat, people are released from their rivalries and reconciled. Through his death, the scapegoat purges society of its accumulated violence. The scapegoat's resulting sanctity is the long-term echo of the awe, relief and visceral re-attachment to the community that was experienced at his death.
  • Today's atheist polemics ignore the main insight of the anthropology of religion—that religion is not primarily about God, but about the human need for the sacred. As René Girard argues, religion is not the cause of violence, but the solution to it Roger Scruton
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    Girard begins from an observation no impartial reader of the Hebrew Bible or the Koran can fail to make, which is that religion may offer peace, but has its roots in violence. The God presented in these writings is often angry, given to fits of destructio
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Introduction to the Philosophy of ... - Google Book Search - 0 views

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    Introduction to the Philosophy of History By Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Leo Rauch
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Transcendence (religion) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    Transcendence (religion)
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YouTube - "Television": Lacan on the unconscious. - 0 views

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    "Television": Lacan on the unconscious.
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Public Space and Freedom - 0 views

  • Public Space James Mensch, St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish,
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