Why This Text Matters | The Varieties of Religious Experience | W. Clark Gilpin
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- Опубліковано 3 гру 2024
- Religious studies courses can feature a broad range and variety of texts, including anything from The Daodejing, to The Mishnah, to Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov, to Mary Douglas’s Purity and Danger, to Said’s Orientalism. The Marty Center partnered with the Undergraduate Religious Studies Program to design “Why This Text Matters” as a series of videos to help faculty prepare for courses, their students, and anyone generally curious about important texts in the study of religion. In the space of about 30 minutes, viewers can gain a deeper understanding of the context, themes, and significance of texts taught by experts at the University of Chicago Divinity School.
About the Text:
William James published "The Varieties of Religious Experience: A Study of Human Nature" in 1902. By 1928, the book was in its thirty-sixth printing, and it remains one of the most influential books about religion ever written by an American. James, formally trained as a physician, was a member of the Department of Philosophy at Harvard University at a time when psychology was just beginning to separate from philosophy, and interpreters of James’s work have frequently described him as a “philosophical psychologist.” Not surprisingly, then, this book begins its exploration of religion by focusing on personal religious experience: “the feelings, acts, and experiences of individual men in their solitude, so far as they apprehend themselves to stand in relation to whatever they may consider the divine.”