The secular revolution: power, interests, and conflict in the secularization of American public life
معرفی کتاب «The secular revolution: power, interests, and conflict in the secularization of American public life» نوشتهٔ Christian Smith (editor)، منتشرشده توسط نشر University of California Press در سال 2003. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
smith Provides The Reader With A Powerful New Framework For Assessing The Secularization Of American Public Life, Including A Wealth Of New Insights And Historical Evidence On Religion In American Institutions. For Those Interested In Religion's Changing Role In The Public Arena, This Is Essential Reading, Certain To Have Tremendous Impact.roger Finke, Professor Of Sociology And Religious Studies At Penn State And Coauthor Of acts Of Faith: Explaining The Human Side Of Religion
finally A Much Welcome Sociological Study Of Secularization That Eschews Assumptions Of Inevitability In Favor Of Flesh-and-blood Institutional Histories, From The Fields Of Education, Journalism, And Law To Science, Medicine, And Even Religion Itself.ronald L. Numbers, Hilldale And William Coleman Professor Of The History Of Science And Medicine, University Of Wisconsin-madison, And Author Of the Creationists
secularization Has Long Been Talked About As If It Were The Inevitable Product Of Vast Impersonal Forces Operating Above Our Heads.
in This Fascinating Collection, The Authors Descend From The Stratosphere To Investigate The Power Struggles That Actually Brought About Secularization In Education, Law, And Journalism. A Wonderful, Arresting Book That Gives Secularization A Human Face.nicholas Wolterstorff, Author Of john Locke And The Ethics Of Belief
this Book Is Sure To Evoke Debate, Agreement, Contention, And Future Research By Historians, Sociologists, Political Scientists, And Scholars Of American Religion.rhys H. Williams, Editor, journal For The Scientific Study Of Religion
Introduction : rethinking the secularization of American public life / Christian Smith Secularizing American higher education : the case of early American sociology / Christian Smith Educational elites and the movement to secularize public education : the case of the National Education Association / Kraig Beyerlein The positivist attack on Baconian science and religious knowledge in the 1870s / Eva Marie Garroutte 5. Power, ridicule, and the destruction of religious moral reform politics in the 1920s / P.C. Kemeny My own salvation : the Christian century and psychology's secularizing of American Protestantism / Keith G. Meador From Christian civilization to individual civil liberties : framing religion in the legal field, 1880-1949 / David Sikkink 8. Reforming education, transforming religion, 1876-1931 / George M. Thomas, Lisa R. Peck, and Channin G. De Haan Promoting a secular standard : secularization and modern journalism, 1870-1930 / Richard W. Flory After the fall : attempts to establish an explicitly theological voice in debates over science and medicine after 1960 / John H. Evans. Contents Preface 1 Introduction: Rethinking the Secularization of American Public Life 2 Secularizing American Higher Education: The Case of Early American Sociology 3 Educational Elites and the Movement to Secularize Public Education: The Case of the National Education Association 4 The Positivist Attack on Baconian Science and Religious Knowledge in the 1870s 5 Power, Ridicule, and the Destruction of Religious Moral Reform Politics in the 1920s 6 “My Own Salvation” The Christian Century and Psychology’s Secularizing of American Protestantism 7 From Christian Civilization to Individual Civil Liberties: Framing Religion in the Legal Field, 1880–1949 8 Reforming Education, Transforming Religion, 1876 –1931 9 Promoting a Secular Standard: Secularization and Modern Journalism, 1870–1930 10 After the Fall: Attempts to Establish an Explicitly Theological Voice in Debates over Science and Medicine after 1960 Contributors Index The secularization of American public life has long-been considered an inevitable and natural outcome of modernization. Christian Smith and his team of contributors reject this view, boldly arguing that the declining authority of religion beginning around 1870 was not the byproduct of modernization, but rather the intentional achievement of cultural and intellectual elites seeking to gain control of social institutions and increase their own cultural authority. -- From publisher's description Here, Smith provides the reader with a powerful new framework for assessing the secularization of American public life, including a wealth of new insights and historical evidence on religion in American institutions.