Post date: Apr 01, 2020 10:45:19 PM
Summary:
What is the relationship between religion and atheism? Is atheism itself a religion? Can there be atheistic religions? Is atheism necessarily an antireligious position?
In this chapter I argue that atheism itself is not a religion. However, I maintain that three world religions - Jainism, Buddhism, and Confucianism - are atheistic in one of the primary senses of that term as defined in the general introduction to this volume: the denial that a theistic god exists. I also show that in an important sense atheism does not even stand in opposition to theistic religions.
Interests: Philosophy of the Social Sciences, Philosophy of Law, Philosophy of Religion
Michael Martin is the author or editor of a number of books, including Atheism: A Philosophical Justification (1989), The Case Against Christianity (1991), Atheism, Morality, and Meaning (2002), The Impossibility of God (2003), The Improbability of God (2006), and The Cambridge Companion to Atheism (2006).
THE CONCEPT OF A RELIGION
The concept of religion was developed historically in the Judeo-Christian context and still has its clearest application in this context. Just as the concept of atheism applied outside its original historical context can be misleading, so too can the concept of religion applied outside its original context. Nevertheless, it will be assumed here that cautious application outside its clearest historical context can be also illuminating at least to Western readers. To answer the separate questions of whether atheism is a religion, and whether there are atheistic religions a prior question must be considered: What does it mean to say that something is a religion? It is impossible here to discuss the many attempts to define religion in philosophy, religious studies, and social science. Since my training and background is philosophical, I consider two of the best recent analyses of the concept of religion to be found in the philosophical literature.