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Religious gestures and secular strengths: Emerson, Nagel, and Kateb on the religious temperament

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 September 2019

REZA HOSSEINI*
Affiliation:
Faculty of Social and Health Sciences, Independent Institute of Education, MSA, 144, Peter Road, Ruimsig, Johannesburg 1724, South Africa

Abstract

What would happen to the reception of Emerson if one does not share his religious sentiments? I argue that appreciating Emerson does not depend upon sharing a similar attitude towards religion not only because we can discern a secular sense of wonder in his writings, as George Kateb claims, but also because his literary excellence shows us ways of wonder in the first place. Further, I show that though there is a brief exchange of similar ideas between Emerson and Thomas Nagel in the latter's engagement of ‘the religious temperament’, their responses to what they call the tremendousness of existence is fundamentally different.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019

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