Religion in the public sphere

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Abstract

Religious traditions and communities of faith have gained a new, hitherto unexpected political importance since the epochmaking change of 1989-90. Needless to say, what initially spring to mind are the variants of religious fundamentalism that we face not only in the Middle East, but also in Africa, Southeast Asia, and in the Indian subcontinent. They often lock into national and ethnic conflicts, and today also form the seedbed for the decentralized form of terrorism that operates globally and is directed against the perceived insults and injuries caused by a superior Western civilization. There are other symptoms, too.

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APA

Habermas, J. (2016). Religion in the public sphere. In Religion in the Public Space: Volume III (pp. 3–27). Taylor and Francis. https://doi.org/10.15448/0103-314x.2021.1.41617

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