Barry A. Kosmin, Ariela Keysar - Secularism and Secularity - Contemporary International Perspectives-Institute For The Study of Secularism in Society & Culture (ISSSC)
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Barry A. Kosmin, Ariela Keysar - Secularism and Secularity - Contemporary International Perspectives-Institute For The Study of Secularism in Society & Culture (ISSSC)
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Secularity
Edited by Barry A. Kosmin and Ariela KeysarPREFACE
ble. By the
ion
or decades commentators assumed that secularization was ine.
latter part of the 20th century, however, it was being argued that reli
was changing rather than declining. Yer just as there are many ways of being,
religi
abundantly clear is not only that religiosity but also thar both secula
xis, $0 there are many ways of not being religious. What is becoming
ity (as
a description of individual orientations) and secularism (as a description of
ized.
more than 80% of Danes are formally members of the established state
society) are far more complicated, even paradoxical, than had been recog:
Whi
religion, less than 5% attend church on a weekly basis—and there are fewer
official members of the Church of England (26%) than non-members who feel
they belong (29%). Depending on what is understood by the concept, between
one and 46% of the population of the United States can be defined as “secular,”
yet 67% of Americans who say they have no religion believe in the existence of
God—and, at the same time, there are selfidentifying Lutherans and Roman
Catholics professing that they do not believe in God.
This book presents a fascinating account of the inconsistent evidence as
it valiantly struggles to chart the diversity to be found among the neglected
with the
variables of disbelief and unbelief. We have recently become familia
category “spiritual but not religious” without really knowing what this means
to thase who identify themselves as such. We are less familiar with the range
of beliefs that include ideologically inspired atheism, agnosticism, apathy,
indifference and what Voas calls the muddled middle between the religious and
the secular,
Ax the social level, comparative analyses reveal even more variation than
we find at the individual level. One widely accepted definition of secularization
has been “a process whereby religious thinking, practice and institutions lose
social significance.”' This ean happen almost absent-mindedly, as in England.
In countries such as Canada, Australia and most of Western Europe, individuals
may engage in religious and/or spiritual practices, but this is as a private, leisure
pursuit; institutionalised churches no longer play the central role they once did
in education, welfare or politics, and secular values of maximization of profit or
consumerism have been replacing concems about salvation. But few processes
are irreversible—and desccularization can also appear in a variety of forms, one
iiiSecutarism & Secucariry
apparently being revivals of dormant Christian consciousness in parts of Europe
a result of growing immigrant Muslim populations.
Sometimes secularization has been the result of state-imposition. There is,
however, a world of difference between Albania during the rule of Enver Hoxha
when no religious observance whatsocver was permitted, and the dicie¢of France
where a variety of religious and secular worldviews may flourish. Indias secular
po
philosophy—and in Israel, an avowedly secular state, marriage and divorce ate
possible only within a recognised religion.
ion has been described as more of a political arrangement than a secular
Important issues are broached: ‘To what extent, for example, docs our
unprecedented globalization resule in the fear of loss of identity and, hence, the
strengthening of national or local religions? Can secular (enlightenmene) values
be incorporated into the sort of theocratic regime that Iran has experienced since
its 1979 revolucion? When the 3Bs (belonging, belief and behavior) cease 10 be
religious, does nothing—or anything—fill the gap?
This book may not give us a definitive picture of what the situation is in
it offers us a much fuller one than most of us had
the contemporary world bu
before—and if it raises more questions than it answers, that is not a bad thing,
Dr. Eileen Barker
Professor Emeritus of Sociology with Special Reference to the Study of Retigion
London School of Economies
ENDNoTES
1. Bryan R. Wilson, 1966. Religion in Secudar Society. London: Watts p. 14INTRODUCTION
Contemporary Secularity and Secularism
Barry A. Kosmin
ecularism and
s variants are terms much bandied about today, paradox
lly,
jon seeming to have become more pervasive and
as a consequence of reli
influential in public life and sociery worldwide. This situation poses a number
of questions,
First, a definitional question: What are the spheres of secularity and
secularism today? According to our understanding in this volume, secularity
dividuals and their social and psychological characteristics while
secularism refers to the realm of social institutions.
refers to
Then some sociological questions: Who is secular today? How much of the
American or other national population is secular? What do those people who
are secular believe? How isa secular preference manifested on the personal level
by individuals in their ways of belonging, their personal beliefs, and their social
behaviors?
These are the questions the authors in this volume attempt in different ways
to answer fora number of diverse, contemporary societies.
Since Secularity, the first category in the binary typology, involves individual
actors’ personal behavior and identification with secular ideas and traditions
Seculari
as a mode of consciousness, it lends itself to empirical analy:
s
manifestations in terms of general trends can be measured and compared, as our
authors demonstrate in the first half of this volume, with regard to the larger
English-speaking nations—Britain, Canada, Australia and the U.S.
Secularism, the second category, involves organizations and legal constructs
that reflect the institutional expressions of the secul: a nation's political realm.
and public life, By their nature, these variables are much harder to quantify,
especially when viewed globally. Forms of secularism can be expected to vary
with the religious configuration in which they develop. This volume’s authors,
and consequently its readers, face the difficult task of qualitatively evaluating2 Secutarism & Securariry
the symbolic and cultural encoding of the religious legacies of Hinduism
(India), Judaism (Israel), Islam (Lran), € sm (France), and Protestan
(Denmark, U.S. and British Commonwealth countries) in national public
‘atholici
institutions and mentalities
Another distinction must be offered, between “hard” and “soft” forms
of seculatity and secularism, This relates to artitudes towards modes of
separation of the secular from the religious and the resulting relationship
follows, a typology is presented (Figure 1) that
between them. In wha
combines these two sets of distinctions. This typology may be used for analy:
and policy formulation,
The Secular Tradition
The terms “secular,” “secularism,” and “secularization” have a range of meanings.
The words derive from the Latin, secu/em, which means both this age and
this world, and combines a spatial sense and a temporal sense. In the Middle
Ages, secular referred to priests who worked out in the world of local parishes,
as opposed to priests who took vows of poverty and secluded themselves in
mor
stic communities, These latter priests were called “religious.” During
the Reformation, secularization denoted the seizure of Catholic ecclesiastical
properties by the state and their conversion to non-religious use. In all of these
instances, the secular indicates a distancing from the sacred, the eternal, and the
otherworldl
In the cent
ies that followed the secular began to separate itself from
religious authority, But has the world now gone further in creating an
autonomous existence for the secu
ar? Since the 1780s, on the reverse of the
I, the
as appeared. My interpretation of the adoption
U.S. national seal, and since the 1930s, on the reverse of the one-dollar bi
phrase Novus Ordo Seclorum
of that Latin phrase is that the founders of the American Republic viewed the
“new order of the ages” quite deliberately as a new era in which the old order of
King and Church was to be displaced from authority over public life by a secular
republican order.
The two revolutions of the 18th century, the American and the French,
produced two intellectual and constitutional traditions of secularism. One,
associated with the French Jacobin cradition, was unreservedly antagonistic
to religion, and promoted atheism. This situation arose from the historical
reality of the revolutionary experience, which involved a joint struggle againse
his
essentially political construction continues under the regime of daieiné bound up
Church.
Catholic
despotism and religion, the monarchy, and the Roman
with La Loi de 1905 (sce chapter 9). This tradition has only a marginal place inlutrRepuctOn CONTEMPORARY SECULARITY AND SECULARISM 3
American public life. The reason, of course, is that the United States was heir
to the Protestant heritage of the Reformation, whereby religious individu
ism
and autonomy predated any concept of political autonomy. The result was that
the Americans adopted a more moderate approach, characterized by indifference
towards religion or encouragement of religious pluralism as promoted by the
Deists and Liberal Protestants of the early republic.
ATypology
In light of this sketch of the historical background it is possible to devise a
typology based on a binary model of hard and soft secularism. Bifurcation of
secular perspectives on religion comprises only one dimension of this typology.
The second dimension is based on the distinction between individuals
and institutions. Here the individual aspect primarily pertains to states of
consciousness while the institutional aspect relates to social structures and their
cultural systems.
The typology based on these two dimensions is presented in Figure 1. In
actual fact these are not closed cells bur ranges stretched between the polarities
of the dimensions. There can exist between soft-soft and hard-hard secularism a
range of intermediate positions.
Figure 1
A Typology of Secularism
Khomeini, Locke; Jefferson; Hobbes; Marx, Dawkins;
Theocracy Aibecal Religionsts Deists Agnostics Atheists
INDIVIDUAL STATES OF CONSCIOUSNESS
NO
SECULARISM C=
‘SECULARISM, SECULARISM
NATIONAL INSTITUTIONS & STRUCTURES:
IRAN UK CANADA USA FRANCE, Ushi
DENMARK AUSTRALIA TURKEY CHINA,
ISRAEL Iota.4 Secutarism & Secutaniry
Various thinkers and their associated ideologies are listed in the top row
to illustrate these gradations. In the bottom row, countries arc listed ina hierarchy:
that relates to their approximate degree of constitutional or institutional
secularism.
In addition, the boundary between the individual and the institu
ions
is not firm in real life, There is an interplay that involves social expectations
and constrai
uts originating from institutions on the one hand and extreme
subjective mental states that ate individually based on the other. For example,
the sociological concept of role refers to both structural constraines and personal
sentiments and beliefs,
With Figure Fas a model or guide, it is possible to classify and examine
whether and how the various secular traditions operate in different realms of
life—sociery, economics, politics, education, and culture, Who are today’s
proponents of the swo different cradivions stemming from the revolusions of
the 18th century? Where do they have influence in the contemporary world?
How should such questions be investigated in the 21st century, in a much more
integrated and compacted world? A contemporary cross-cultural analysis of
ism poses particular challenges, as the essays on India, Israel, and Iran
illustrate, since Hinduism, Judaism, and Islam vary not only in their theologies
and traditions with respect to the state, but also in their approaches to how they
perceive the role of the individual in society.
Secularization
nis associated with differentiation.
In modern sociological theory, seculaciza
Differentiation des
bes the growing division of labor in modern society
as life goes through a process of fragmentation into numerous spheres, each
operating according to its own laws and principles. Asa result, there is no master,
that holds social life, institutions, ideas, and
integrating principle or nareativ
ideals together.
Since the end of the 19th century, there has been a growi
g, recognition
among, students of religion that the theologies and institutions embodying
religion have been transformed by the process of secularization, Max Weber
described secularization as the “disenchantmentof the world”'!—acharacterization
of the process of rationalization he adopted from the poet Friedrich Schiller, By
this process, Weber sought to capture the psychic and cultural transformation in
which magical elements of thought and symbolism are progressively displaced
by empiricism and rationality. Harvey Cox described secularization as the
“deliverance of man ‘first from religious and then from metaphysical control
over his reasons and his language’... the dispelling of all closed worldviews, the
On the wider sociecal
breaking of all supernarural myths and sacred symbollutrRepuctOn CONTEMPORARY SECULARITY AND SECULARISM 5
level, Peter Berger defined secularization as “the process by which sectors of saciety
are removed from the domination of religious institutions and symbols."*
Ie is now widely recognized that the process of secularization is dialectic: the
more that hearts and minds become “disenchanted,” the more institutions that
have specialized in the promotion of the “enchantment
and authority. The more such institutions lose plausibility and authority, the
process lose plausibility
ulcated in the
less the psycho-emotional processes of “enchantment” are
hearts and minds of individuals. How far the process of secularization has
progressed in difference societies since the end of the 19th century, whether
the process is unidirectional or not, and what its consequences ate for social
and political organization and human welfare, is the subject of ongoing debate
among sociologists and theologians, as well as politicians and social planners. In
fact, the current state of the debate for the nations of the English-speaking world
is well represented in this volume.
‘Soft and Hard Secularism
Modernity has been the trigger for differentiation, with its attendant process
of secularization. It freed the spheres of cultural life, such as a
law, polities,
learning, science, and commerce, from their embeddedness in a comprehensive
Christian culture and allowed chem to pursue their own paths of development,
‘Thus, the U.S. Constitution set politics on a new course by wisely prohibiting
a “religious test for public office.” This is an example of a political initiative to
establish soft secularism at the societal level of institutions that leaves matters of
conscience to individual choice,
Politics,
principles and values. Religious principles and values were to be mote or less
different
and values can have no role in politics and public life in American democra
the modern secular understanding, now had its own immanent
ted from political ones. This does not imply that religious principles
Ir only implies that, in terms of the perspective of the constitution and the
avy, religious institutions and governmental institutions are differentiaced. The
philosophical term for this condi
is monism (Le. theocracy and totalitarianism).
ion of differentiation is pluralism. Its opposite
Most Americans, regardless of whether they are liberal or conservative,
Christian or Jew or othex, adhere to epistemological fallibilism and so are
pluralists and, hence, soft secularists. They accept at a fundamental level that
law, politics, art, and learning should not be controlled by religious institutions
or clergy but have their own traditions, spheres, and dynamics. In the social-
structural sense, although there ate evident strains, America has been and
remains a soft secular republic.
nt theo-
Reinhold Neibuhr, one of 20th-century America’s leading Protest6 Secutarism & Secutaniry
logians, observed almost halfa century ago that Americans are “at once the most
religious and the most secular of nations. How shall we explain this paradox?
Could it be that [Americans] are most religious partly in consequence of being
the most secular culture?"#
In his book Protestant, Catholic, few, Will Herberg wrote about the paradox
of “pervasive secularism and mounting ‘eligiosity,”? a mind-set involving
thinking and living within a broad framework of reality that is far from one’s
professed religious beliefs, This apparent paradox still exists today because it is
part of the American cultural tradition.
As soft secularis
5, most Americans want government to accommodate
religious behavior, even within the domain of government itself. For example,
they accept that institutionalized persons o military personnel should have
access to religious services, guidance, or leadership and that these may be paid
for, as in the case of military and prison chaplains, with taxpayer dollars, They
did not bal
Mennonites, to be conscientious objectors. The mainstream consensus is that it
Ik when the law allowed for religious pacifists, such as Quakers or
is crucial to a free society to respect the religious convictions of its citizens: it is
crucial to a pluralistic, differentiated, secular political order to carve outa sphere
for freedom of religion and to let that sphere be autonomous, to the greatest
extent possible, of pressures emanating from government.
The existence of religion within its proper sphere, alongside the other
differentiated spheres of a modern pluralistic society, is an exemplification of
differentiation, not a rejection of it. This is why America can be said to subscribe
vo a soft secularism. Interestingly, that other great democracy, India (see chapter
12), also has an official idealogy of political secula
m that is similarly
preted as pluralism and tolerance of religious differences.
Hard secularism is a term that can be associated with Weber's transfor
ation of cons.
jousness. It is usually more purely intellectual and personal than
ings of Hobbes, whe
rd faith
as intellectually unreliable and therefore morally dangerous. Following Hobbes
social or political. A precursor can be found in the w
aimed that those who followed the light of reason are bound to di:
cl
and other like-minded philosophers, Marx suggested thar faith was an ideology
in contradistinction to knowledge, which was used by regimes for the purpose
of political control. Weber saw the process of secularization as the culmination
of the process of rationalization and as the ultimate disenchantment of the world
by modern science.
In this sense, secular refers to a worldview, a system of beliefs, or a modality
of sense-making that is determinedly non-religious. A disenchanted universe is
a purely physical and material one, It gives no support to either moral ideals—lutrRepuctOn CONTEMPORARY SECULARITY AND SECULARISM 7
which are the result of evolutionary processes—or to religious beliefs—which
are the perversely lingering products of more naive ages, eventually to be swept
away by the triumph of a properly scientific outlook.
ive a
Disenchantment refers to an emptying out of magic, mystery, hints of
transcendence, or a faith in realities, entities, or forces unseen but intuited and
Vs spokesmen
believed ro be essential to human welfare and flourishing. Tod
inchade Richard Dawkins and Paul Kurtz, or California's activist doctor-lawyen
Michael Newdow. They all take hard secularism to its logical conclusion,
Atheism—the belief in the meaninglessness and irrationality of theism. Such
hard secularists are few and far between in America, although more common in
‘Western and Eastern Europe.
The soft secularist individual is neithera convinced Atheist nor a principled
materialist, and may not be hostile to religious beliefs and institutions. In fact,
the majority are liberal religionists, The soft seculacist is willing co take a live-
and-let-live attitude toward religion as long as it doesn't impinge on his freedom
of choice or seek control of American public institutions, For the soft secularist,
religion is properly a private lifestyle option, which must not threaten liberty and
social harmony in a differentiated and pluralistic society.
The majority of America’s self-described identifiers with No Religion, the
so-called “religious nones,” also fit this profile of soft secularists. Their level of
secularity shows that they are by no means hard-core Atheists or even Agnostics,
who together constitute less than 1 percent of the population (see chapter 3).
Sixty-seven percent of Nones believe in the existence of Gods 56 percent agree
that God intervenes personally in their lives co help thems 57 percent believe
that God performs miracles
The upshot of such findings is that, in Ametica, the majority of secularists
are religious in a sense. Even those who do not belong to religious institutions
or identify with religious communities have theistic beliefs and concerns. Thus,
although the self-described secular population of the U.S. has doubled since
1990, it cannot be said that Ameri
religious, only thae there is less identification v
can society has become more irreligious or
ant
h religious groups per se.
American Exceptionalism
Secularity, like religion, takes many forms in American society, Also like religion,
ic varies in intensity along the trajectories of belonging, belief, and behavior.
Religion in a Free Market shows that the American public does not subscribe
toa binary system. In America, secula
y is one option among many in a free-
market-oriented society, The boundaries between religion and secularity, and
between different religions, are not clearly fixed (see chapter 1). This confusion8 Secutarism & Secutaniry
is to be expected. Secularism, like religion, has developed in various forms at
different levels and in different realms,
By way of institutional differentiation, modernization has involved a degree
of secularization. As societies modernize, their religious beliefs, behaviors, and
institutions can change in many different ways. This can include forms that are a
reaction to secularism, both hard and soft, that are embedded in modernization.
Relici
jous fundamentalism, which must nor be confused with pre
traditional religion perse, is an adaptation (0 conditions of modern secularization
oder
(see chapters 11 and 13).
‘The contemporary United States, by contrast, exhibits both high modernity
and substantial religiosity among the populace and so shows that secularization
has notbeen sweeping, thorough and total. This situation is just what many “soft
thinkers of the Enlightenment, such as John Locke, Adam Smith, and
Thomas Jefferson, both desired and predicted.
secularist
Institutional soft secularism, combined with endeavors to revitalize religio
Ss
consciousness at the individual level, was exemplified in the American tradition of
religious liberty. Created by Roger Williams, William Penn and James Madison's
theologically charged “Memorial and Remonstrance” it was a product of the
moral and religious imagination of dissenting Protestantism. The very phrase,
separation of church and state, which Jefferson used in his 1802 letter to the
Danbury Baptist Association, derives from Roger Williams, who sought to keep
of the world.
as a constitutional principle arose in a world where many
the garden of the church separate from the politic:
Religious liberty
people believed that their duties to God were more primary than their duties to
the state; thar the state had to make room for its citizens to conduct a higher
business than the business of citizenship. Thus the achievement of a secular
political order was in service to the religious impel
ive. Constitutionally,
the Establishment Clause was to serve the Free Exercise Clause, and from
this perspective social-structural secularization was not meant to further the
secularization of consciousness, but to inhibit it.
Or, to put
mote sociologically, social-structural “soft secularization” was
meant to accomplish in part religious ends. The secular end was democracy as
against theocracy, as well as the unfettered progress of science. Religion was to
have an instrumental role in disciplining individual behavior and making a free
society and a democratic, federal republic a viable collective reality.
This is emphatically noe the case in some other countries where separation
of church and state—in our terms, social-structural secularization—has been
instituted in order to further the secularization of consciousness. The prototype
for this hard secularism was the French Revolution in its Jacobin phase, butlutrRepuctOn CONTEMPORARY SECULARITY AND SECULARISM 9
perhaps the most radical instance was the former USSR and the remaining
Communist countries today. The Marxist-Leninist ideology was based on
the conviction that science was superior to religion from an epistemological
perspective and that the progress of science would inevitably lead to the
elimination of religiou
and political levels was designed to assault and eradicate religion using the state
consciousness. The ensuing secularization at the social
apparatus, often in the most brutal ways, in order o bring abouta thorough and
consistently hard secular society.
Contemporary France and Turkey also separate religion
nd state in order to
advance a secular ideology of republicanism or /aieité. The interesting ancillary
feature in such polities is that they have developed a highly centralized, statist
ial and educational realms, The state demands
trajectory particularly in the so
loyalty in terms of consciousness. Its goal is a standardized and homogeneous,
a, the policy
relatively hard secularist sociesy, In contrast, in the U.S, and Ind
encourages pluralism among the people. So America is much less secularized at
the level of consciousness, as well as in the worldview and the moral sensibilities
of the majority of its citizens, than is France,
Any social configuration has its benefits and costs. The main virtue of this
constellation is undoubtedly the peaceful co-existence of diverse religious and
non-teligious individuals and groups. This regime has avoided both religious
wars and theocracy.
What then are the costs or problems associated with U.S. secularism as
we enter the 21st century? The most obvious political problem in recent years
is thac the public sphere has become a battlefield for those who do not accept
the status quo of soft secularism, notably the hard secularists and the radical
religious movements and theocrats. One cost is that the majority that accepts
the traditional American constellation of soft secularism lacks morale and
tional, with which to defend and
adequate tools, both intellectual and organiz
revitalize this constellation.
A major public poli
y issue is thar hard and soft secularism compete
particularly in che arena of jurisprudence, In the mid-20ch century, strict
separation made the running and succeeded in removing the daily prayer
and Bible reading from the public schools, and set greater distance between
religious practices and governmental settings than had previously been the case
in Ametican history
‘The conservative political reaction after 1970 limited the
trend towards achieving a purer standard of social-structural secularization.
Numerous court decisions since 1990 have reversed the locomotive of hard
seculatization of the public squate, ot at least complicated the course of this
mode of secularization. The use of public monies to provide tuition vouchers at