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Catching Up with Marx: Truth, Myth, and the Niceties of “Belief”

from General Failures

Matthew Day
Affiliation:
Florida State University
William Arnal
Affiliation:
University of Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
Willi Braun
Affiliation:
University of Alberta, Canada
Russell T. McCutcheon
Affiliation:
University of Alabama
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Summary

If there is anything that unites the hopelessly disjointed field of religious studies, it is the methodological practice of suspending or “bracketing” the epistemic desire to evaluate a given community's claims about the world. According to Jacques Waardenburg, for example, “the study of religion modestly puts the question of the ultimate truth of these religions between brackets (epoché)” (2000: 107). Nevertheless, Don Wiebe has argued for nearly thirty years that the academic study of religion must abandon its strategic hedging about such matters and confront the question of truth headon. His conviction is that a genuinely “critical” or “scientific” study of religion—a distinction that he never quite makes clear—is impossible so long as we shy away from asking: Is any of the stuff that these people say true? Wiebe insists that until we stop bracketing this frankly philosophical issue, scholars of religion will be damned to a dismal choice between flaccid reportage and covert apologetics. As he makes the case in Religion and Truth: “The scientific study of religion insofar as it seeks an explanation of the phenomena it scrutinizes, far from resting on the distinction between ‘the truth about religion’ and ‘the truth of religion,’ precludes it” (1981: 3). One might say that Wiebe has been proposing a sort of professional methodological addendum to Alexander Kinglake's cheeky suggestion that plaques with the legend Important If True should be posted over the door of every church, synagogue, mosque and temple.

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Publisher: Acumen Publishing
Print publication year: 2012

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