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6 - Education and Religious Diversity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2014

Roger Trigg
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
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Summary

RELIGIOUS TRUTH IN EDUCATION

Religious commitments essentially involve an acceptance of certain propositions as true. Faith is itself always faith in something or somebody, imagined or real, and the moment it is specified what that is, beliefs are being articulated about what is real. It is not just an arbitrary attitude directed at a void, or an intention to live a particular way of life. That would make it difficult to see why there should be any particular respect for the principled stand a religious believer might wish to take. Conscientious objection typically cannot be just a matter of an idiosyncratic abhorrence of something. It depends, particularly when it is derived from religion, on a sincerely held belief about the nature of the world and what is right or wrong. Those who regard such attitudes as only subjectively valid cannot get to grips with why they are worthy of respect. The American legal philosopher Brian Leiter writes, “Notice that beliefs or the attitudes of believers are central to the analysis of religion precisely because it would be hard to see how mindless, habitual, or merely casual religious practices could claim whatever moral solicitude is due matters of conscience.” Actions that are mere rituals cannot be regarded as different from actions, compulsively repeated for no reason, such as the constant washing of already clean hands. They are left with no significance beyond themselves. Even if they are embedded in a way of life, they are ultimately pointless unless they can be given a purported grounding in some belief about why they matter.

If religious practices make sense only against a given background of belief about what is true, they have to be answerable to human reason. We use our rationality to specify what we believe in, and thereby lay ourselves open to argument and even contradiction. Religion may sometimes seem to put itself beyond the scope of rational discussion, simply because it attempts to deal with the transcendent. Only those in the grip of an ideology that makes science the sole arbiter of reality see anything transcendent that as, by definition, inaccessible. The cognitive structure of the human mind is well equipped to conceive of it, as the cognitive science of religion well illustrates.

Type
Chapter
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Religious Diversity
Philosophical and Political Dimensions
, pp. 96 - 113
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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References

Leiter, BrianWhy Tolerate Religion?Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J., 2012, p. 35Google Scholar
Chater, Mark and Erricker, CliveDoes Religious Education Have a Future?Routledge, London, 2013, p. 84Google Scholar
Religion in Public Life, Must Faith be Privatized?Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2007
Laicité et Republique, Rapport au President de la Republique, La Documentation Francaise, Paris 2004, p. 137
Castelli, Mike, “Faith Dialogue as A Pedagogy for a Post-Secular Religious Education,” Journal of Beliefs and Values 13, 2012, pp. 207–216CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dawkins, Richard, The God Delusion, Bantam Press, London, 2006, p. 340Google Scholar
Trigg, Roger, Religion in Public Life, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2007, p. 57ffGoogle Scholar
Equality, Freedom and Religion, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2012, p. 60

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