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Oxford University Press, USA

Visions of Religion: Experience, Meaning, and Power

Visions of Religion: Experience, Meaning, and Power

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Winner of the Gustave O. Arlt Award in the Humanities

Three understandings of the nature of religion--religion as experience, symbolic meaning, and power--have dominated scholarly discussions, in succession, for the past hundred years. Proponents of each of these three approaches have tended to downplay, ignore, or actively criticize the others.

But why should the three approaches be at odds? Religion as it is practiced involves experiences, meanings, and power, so students of religion should attend to all three. Furthermore, theorists of religion should have an account that carefully conceptualizes all three aspects, without regarding any
of them as more basic than the others.

Visions of Religion provides just such an account. Stephen S. Bush examines influential proponents of the three visions, arguing that each approach offers substantial and lasting contributions to the study of religion, although each requires revision.

Bush rehabilitates the concepts of experience and meaning, two categories that are much maligned these days. In doing so, he shows the extent to which these categories are implicated in matters of social power. As for power, the book argues that the analysis of power requires attention to meaning
and experience.

Visions of Religion accomplishes all this by articulating a social practical theory of religion that can account for all three aspects, even as it incorporates them into a single theoretical framework.


Author: Stephen S. Bush
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 11/03/2014
Pages: 272
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.08lbs
Size: 9.55h x 6.48w x 0.91d
ISBN: 9780199387403

Review Citation(s):
Choice 06/01/2015 pg. 1673

About the Author

Stephen S. Bush is the Manning Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at Brown University. His interests broadly are in theory of religion, philosophy of religion, and religious ethics. He has published essays in Journal of Religion, Journal of Religious Ethics, Soundings, Religious Studies, and Philosophical Review.

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