Repository | Book | Chapter

186432

The inner journey of the gnostic self

ethics and politics

Joel S. Kahn

pp. 99-120

We have already had occasion to cite Jürgen Habermas"s remarks on the "new, deinstitutionalized forms of a fickle religiosity that [have] withdrawn entirely into the subjective" (cited in Mendieta 2010), a jibe that seems to have been prompted by the "growth and increasing visibility of a demographic identifying as "spiritual-not-religious [SPNR]" in North America,"1 including its embrace of Eastern spirituality. In this, Habermas gives voice to a view that is quite common among Western intellectuals, namely that what they like to call "New Age" spirituality is both morally and politically bankrupt. And this stems from the judgment that all such modern/postmodern forms of spirituality involve a selfish, egocentric pursuit of authenticity on the part of individualized, New Age selves.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-1-137-56795-6_6

Full citation:

Kahn, J. S. (2016). The inner journey of the gnostic self: ethics and politics, in Asia, modernity, and the pursuit of the sacred, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 99-120.

This document is unfortunately not available for download at the moment.