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Call for Papers

Theme: Religion, Value, and a Secular Culture
Type: International Conference
Institution: Council for Research in Values and Philosophy (CRVP)
   University of Kwazulu-Natal
Location: Durban (South Africa)
Date: 5.–6.11.2012

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By the term "secular culture" is meant one which problematizes the
foundations for the various religious beliefs that make up the
traditions of that society, though the public order may not be
founded on any particular expression in those traditions, of the
ethical framing of life together. The shift from a premodern culture
is characterized by two central changes: (i) the greater degree of
individual freedom. This is recognized as a key value in changing
societies and is given expression in the democratic institution of
universal suffrage; and (ii) the emergence and prestige of the
sciences and of scientific method as the default paradigm of human
knowledge. 

As the major religious traditions acquired their canonical expression
in premodern culture, they do not to any great extent deal with a
thought-out response to the major factors or key values which
characterize contemporary culture. Thus the first factor challenges
the traditions to re-think attitudes to women, to moral rules and
values, and to hierarchy; the second factor calls upon religious
thinkers and leaders to be involved in dialogue with the sciences and
knowledge acquired thereby. 

One response to these changed conditions of society has been to
remove religion and religious beliefs altogether from public debate.
This is then framed solely in terms of individual human rights and
the values of equality and tolerance. However, in the absence of any
foundation for these rights and values, this framework might itself
seem arbitrary and imposed, in particular in a global situation of
the interaction of more developed with still developing cultures and
economies. A purely procedural democracy and ethical framework might
disallow real dialogue on substantive values or with persons. 

Not amenable to scientific inquiry strictly speaking. Religious
fundamentalism, for its part, sees no possibility of such dialogue,
and can be seen, as does Karen Armstrong, rather as a reaction
thereto.           

Papers are invited from any discipline whether philosophical,
theological-religious, sociological, psychological, legal, political,
and on any issue arising out of these intellectual challenges: 

- Developments within religious traditions in response to secularity

- Conflicts and divisions within religious traditions in meeting
  the new conditions for religious beliefs

- Differing political frameworks for regulating interaction between
  state and religion

- Legal matters arising from separation of church and state

- Religious traditions as challenging dominant models of secular
  ethics, in particular a possible bias towards individualism

- The problems of building human community and countering
  fragmentation in conditions of a secular culture

- Fundamentalism as response and resistance to secularity; recourse
  to violence

- Secularisation in relation to neo-colonialism

- Responses of particular countries in the face of secularism –
  South Africa, Turkey, United States, and others

- Secularism depicted and problematized in fiction – Pamuk's Snow,
  Dastgir's A Small Fortune, for example

- Secularism and particular religious traditions – Islam,
  Christianity, Hinduism, for example

- Romantic love as a theme in religious responses to secular
  changes – Pamuk, Dastgir, Shutte's Conversion, for example

- Transcendence in a framework of immanence in the religious
  traditions

- African traditional thought and response to secularism

- Debates between science and religion – open and closed versions
  of neo-Darwinism

- Studies of a contemporary writer on these theological themes:
  Karen Armstrong; Keith Ward; Mustafa Akyol; Mark Johnston; for
  example; or on the ethical themes: Alisdair MacIntyre, Herbert
  McCabe, Marilynn Robinson, for example

- Philosophical frameworks for fruitful dialogue between secular
  culture and religious traditions: B. Lonergan; Charles Taylor; and
  others
 

Contact:

Professor John Patrick Giddy
University of Kwazulu-Natal
Durban
South Africa
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.crvp.org/conf/2012/durban.htm




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