Course Number: 
352
Credits: 
4+

Also listed as Philosophy 352. How do we understand “religion” in the 21st century? Is the world becoming more secular? More religious? Does this distinction even work anymore? How might ideas like “saint” and “sacrifice” and “spiritual discipline” help us think and act ethically and politically in the contemporary world? This course explores the ways recent philosophers and theologians have answered such questions by turning to the resources of the Continental philosophical tradition (Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Derrida, Irigaray, etc.) in order to reconceptualize religion, philosophy, and ethics after the “death of God.”

Prerequisite: 
Religious Studies 216 and 311, or two 200-level philosophy courses.

Instructor(s):

* Indicates courses not offered every year.