Description

Book Synopsis
Is religious conservatism compatible with tolerance and pluralism? Why are religious tolerance and pluralism so difficult to achieve? Why is the often violent fundamentalist backlash against them so potent? This book suggests a way to deal with the intractable problem of religiously motivated and justified violence.

Trade Review
The contemporary values of tolerance and pluralism are particularly acute within and for inter-religious interaction between the three Abrahamic-monotheistic religions. However, if monotheistic religions are ever to overcome their antagonistic tensions towards the Other, then critical measures 'must originate and find their basis within these traditions themselves.' Erlewine (Illinois Wesleyan Univ.) indicates that John Hick's and Jurgen Habermas's program--'mutual respect and recognition between citizens, between self and Other,' have been considered and found wanting. As a consequence, traditionalist Jewish and Christian theologians have elaborated political theologies that prioritize revelation while rejecting the Kantian-Enlightenment legacy as filtered through Hick and Habermas. Erlewine articulates his thesis of the religion of reason trajectory, which fuses the integrity of monotheism with the intellectual sustainability of the Enlightenment. The religio-philosophical tradition that he traces, derived from Moses Mendelssohn, Immanuel Kant, and Hermann Cohen, seeks to ameliorate monotheistic intolerance without vitiating the structure of Judaism and Christianity. This religion of reason trajectory engages the three Abrahamic monotheisms, yet is deeply rooted in European philosophy and the Enlightenment. Whether the religion of reason extends to Islam is outside the purview of this book. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-level undergraduates and above. -- ChoiceG. M. Smith, Delaware County Community College, October 2010 "An important corrective to recent discussions of the relation between monotheism and tolerance." -Leora Batnitzky, Princeton University

Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgements

Part 1. Overcoming the Current Crisis
1. Monotheism, Tolerance, and Pluralism: The Current Impasse
2. Learning from the Past: Introducing the Thinkers of the Religion of Reason

Part 2. Mendelssohn: Idolatry and Indiscernability
3. Mendelssohn and the Repudiation of Divine Tyranny
4. Monotheism and the Indiscernible Other

Part 3. Kant: Religious Tolerance
5. Radical Evil and the Mire of Unsocial Sociability
6. Kant and the Religion of Tolerance

Part 4. Cohen: Ethical Intolerance
7. Cohen and the Monotheism of Correlation
8. Cohen, Rational Supererogation, and the Suffering Servant

Conclusion: Revelation, Reason, and the Legacy of the Enlightenment

Notes
Works Cited
Index

Monotheism and Tolerance

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    A Paperback / softback by Robert Erlewine

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      Publisher: Indiana University Press
      Publication Date: 11/01/2010
      ISBN13: 9780253221568, 978-0253221568
      ISBN10: 0253221560
      Also in:
      Judaism

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Is religious conservatism compatible with tolerance and pluralism? Why are religious tolerance and pluralism so difficult to achieve? Why is the often violent fundamentalist backlash against them so potent? This book suggests a way to deal with the intractable problem of religiously motivated and justified violence.

      Trade Review
      The contemporary values of tolerance and pluralism are particularly acute within and for inter-religious interaction between the three Abrahamic-monotheistic religions. However, if monotheistic religions are ever to overcome their antagonistic tensions towards the Other, then critical measures 'must originate and find their basis within these traditions themselves.' Erlewine (Illinois Wesleyan Univ.) indicates that John Hick's and Jurgen Habermas's program--'mutual respect and recognition between citizens, between self and Other,' have been considered and found wanting. As a consequence, traditionalist Jewish and Christian theologians have elaborated political theologies that prioritize revelation while rejecting the Kantian-Enlightenment legacy as filtered through Hick and Habermas. Erlewine articulates his thesis of the religion of reason trajectory, which fuses the integrity of monotheism with the intellectual sustainability of the Enlightenment. The religio-philosophical tradition that he traces, derived from Moses Mendelssohn, Immanuel Kant, and Hermann Cohen, seeks to ameliorate monotheistic intolerance without vitiating the structure of Judaism and Christianity. This religion of reason trajectory engages the three Abrahamic monotheisms, yet is deeply rooted in European philosophy and the Enlightenment. Whether the religion of reason extends to Islam is outside the purview of this book. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-level undergraduates and above. -- ChoiceG. M. Smith, Delaware County Community College, October 2010 "An important corrective to recent discussions of the relation between monotheism and tolerance." -Leora Batnitzky, Princeton University

      Table of Contents

      Contents

      Acknowledgements

      Part 1. Overcoming the Current Crisis
      1. Monotheism, Tolerance, and Pluralism: The Current Impasse
      2. Learning from the Past: Introducing the Thinkers of the Religion of Reason

      Part 2. Mendelssohn: Idolatry and Indiscernability
      3. Mendelssohn and the Repudiation of Divine Tyranny
      4. Monotheism and the Indiscernible Other

      Part 3. Kant: Religious Tolerance
      5. Radical Evil and the Mire of Unsocial Sociability
      6. Kant and the Religion of Tolerance

      Part 4. Cohen: Ethical Intolerance
      7. Cohen and the Monotheism of Correlation
      8. Cohen, Rational Supererogation, and the Suffering Servant

      Conclusion: Revelation, Reason, and the Legacy of the Enlightenment

      Notes
      Works Cited
      Index

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