Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Secularisation
- Defining secularisation
- Woodhead and Heelas
- Disapperance Thesis
- Modernity is bringing
about the death of religion
- Decline in significance
of religion for both
society and individuals
- Differentiation Thesis
- Religion has become
separated from wider
social structure
- No longer
influences major
social institutions
e.g. family,
education, legal and
political systems
- Evaluation
- The distinction
is important
- Recognises that religion
will not disappear but
rather it will cease to be
significant in the working
of the social system
- Hanson
- Narrow Approach
- Focuses on religion at the
level of individual
consciousness
- Broad Approach
- Asks whether religion has
lost significance on the
level of the social system
- Evaluation
- The distinction
is important
- Recognises that religion
will not disappear but
rather it will cease to be
significant in the working
of the social system
- Secularisation
and the West
- Focus on the West
- Does not see it as a global process
- Bruce limits secularisation
thesis to Europe, North
America and Australasia
- Evidence of Secularisation
- The power and
influence of the church
- The power of religious
institutions in Western
Europe has declined over
the past 1000 years
- Church buildings in
ruins or secular uses
- Religious beliefs
- People's
attitudes and
thinking is no
longer based on
religious beliefs
- Narrower
definition of belief
so secularisation
has risen
- Religious practises
- Religious
practises
have declined
- Church membership,
attendance, marriage,
funerals, christenings,
Sunday school, and Bible
reading are down
- Privatised religion
- Decline in
collective religious
practises
- Luckmann - once
religion becomes
private, the individual
can 'pick and choose'
as they please
- Religion is
become a
'private affair'
- Davie - separation of 'belief
and belonging', religious belief
is less likely to be expressed in
an institutional setting
- If privatisation of religion is
widespread, secularisation
is not occurring in Hanson's
narrow approach but rather
in the broad approach
- Beyond church
and denomination
- Barker - NRMs
only affect lives of
followers and make
little difference to
wider society
- Bruce - NAMs
have minimal
effect on soceity
- Rise of NAMs
and NRMs are
insignificant
- Evaluation
- Problems of validity
when measuring
membership
- Davie distinguishes
between belief and
belonging - if belonging
is low, it doesn't mean
that secularisation is
happening
- Both belief and
belonging is
high in the USA
- Ignore NRMs
but it is beyond
major religious
institutions
- Going to church is not
a valid indicator of
religiosity because it
has different meanings
at different times
- Assume that there was a 'golden
age' of religion but peasant religious
practices are under-represented and
the extent of hostility towards religion
from peasants is underestimated
- Theoretical Perspectives
- Marx
- Death of religion
is inevitable
- Social classes and
oppression would
generate religion
- In communist society
these would disappear
and so would religion
- Religion is a
reflection of
class society
- Capitalism
contains the seeds
of secularisation
- Weber
- Rationalisation is
a key process in
modern society
- Reason steadily
replaces faith
- Capitalism was one
of the main factors
in the development
of rational capitalism
- Spirit of capitalism
had its origins in
Calvinism
- Berger
- One of the main factors
leading to secularisation
is the rationality of
Protestantism
- Increase in spiritual
marketplace because of
media, geographical
mobility and globalisation
- People are more
exposed to different
religions so do not
accept one truth. This
weakens the
authority of religion.
- Protestantism has cut
out the enchantment
and sacramental ritual
elements of Catholicism
- Wilson
- Religion is
declining in social
significance
- Social differentiation -
religion ceases to be
significant in the working
of the social system
- Rational thinking and
science - science and the
scientific method displace
religious explanations
- Decline of community -
communal values were
expressed and reinforced in
religious rituals but
industrialisation has broken
up close-knit communities
- Durkheim
- Saw rapid social
changes brought about
my industrialisation as a
threat to religion
- Close-knit community
with shared norms and
values were lifeblood of
religion but changes
resulted in a loss of both
- Decline of
religion is a
reversible trend
- Religion will not
die, it will change
form e.g. Bellah -
civil religion