Abstract |
There are good reasons to expect that modern societies, East and West, will continue to be shaped by an increase of religious, spiritual and secular worldviews, practices and forms of life. What consequences can be drawn from this unprecedented condition? How does the acknowledgment of irreducible religious and nonreligious diversity transform membership and experience in these societies? Rather than simply accommodating religion within the modern state, the version of postsecularism put forward calls for a productive engagement and mutual critique between immanent and absolute conceptions of transcendence. © The Author(s) 2016. |