Erasing Borders: The Lost Bet of Erasmus

A return to history represents a way to a possible solution to the problems encountered today by a sociology of religion perplexed by the continual transformations of an elusive object of study. The present article proposes a borrowing from Weber's sociology of religion in order to discern empi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sociologie et sociétés 2010-04, Vol.42 (1), p.45-68
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description A return to history represents a way to a possible solution to the problems encountered today by a sociology of religion perplexed by the continual transformations of an elusive object of study. The present article proposes a borrowing from Weber's sociology of religion in order to discern empirically the fluctuating borders of a religious thought that emerged at the dawn of modernity & could be taken as a harbinger of present transformations. This exercise does not intend to be taken on historical one but aims at isolating the ideal-typical characteristics in the religious thought of Erasmus of Rotterdam, understood here as a "carrier" of the humanist thought of the 16th century. In proposing to us an interiorized & intellectualized religion reduced to its simplest expression, Erasmus proves to be the promoter of an accessible piety that would be, first & foremost, a guarantee of unity among men-but does he not, in so doing, plead for an erasing of the borders that support the very legitimacy of the religious sphere? Adapted from the source document.
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subjects Borders
Erasmus, Desiderius
History of religion
Modernity
Religion
Religions
Religious studies
Rotterdam, Netherlands
Sociology of Religion
Weber, Max
title Erasing Borders: The Lost Bet of Erasmus
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