Many regard religious experience as the essence of religion, arguing that narratives might be created and rituals invented but that these are always secondary to the original experience itself. However, the concept of "experience" has come under increasing fire from a range of critics and theorists. This Reader presents writings from both those who assume the existence and possible universality of religious experience and those who question the very rhetoric of "experience". Bringing together both classic and contemporary writings, the Reader showcases differing disciplinary approaches to the study of religious experience: philosophy, literary and cultural theory, history, psychology, anthropology; feminist theory; as well as writings from within religious studies. The essays are structured into pairs, with each essay separately introduced with information on its historical and intellectual context. The ultimate aim of the Reader is to enable students to explore religious experience as rhetoric created to authorize social identities. The book will be an invaluable introduction to the key ideas and approaches for students of Religion, as well as Sociology and Anthropology. CONTRIBUTORS: Robert Desjarlais, Diana Eck, William James, Craig Martin, Russell T. McCutcheon, Wayne Proudfoot, Robert Sharf, Ann Taves, Charles Taylor, Joachim Wach, Joan Wallach Scott, Raymond Williams
The Varieties of Religious Experience: A Study in Human Nature
... and the joyous conviction was given me that nothing more was to be done , save to fall on my knees , to accept this Saviour and his love , to praise God forever . ” Autobiography of Hudson Taylor . I translate back into English from ...
"Being the Gifford lectures on natural religion delivered at Edinburgh in 1901-1902." “the most notable of all books in the field of the psychology of religion.”
Religious Experience Revisited explores the contested relationship between experiences and expressions of religion.
In this volume of essays, Howard Wettstein explores the foundations of religious commitment.
In this provocative book, W. W. Meissner, a Jesuit and psychoanalyst, attempts to bring about a rapprochement between psychoanalysis and religious thinking.
This book explores from a philosophical and theological perspective the viability of divine encounters as support for belief in God, arguing that some religious experiences can be accepted as genuine experiences of God and can provide ...
Arguing against the notion that religious experience is ineffable, while advocating the view that it can provide evidence of God's existence, this text contends that social science and nonreligious explanations of religious belief and ...
For a comparison of Durkheim and Bergson, see Raymond Aron, Main Currents in Sociological Thought, vol. II, trans. Richard Howard and Helen Weaver (New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1999), 60. Tadié, Marcel Proust, 205; ...
This Element looks critically at the history and epistemology of religious experience and how the concept can be fruitfully expanded.