1. HISTORICIZING THE SECULARIZATION DEBATE: CHURCH, STATE, AND SOCIETY IN LATE MEDIEVAL AND EARLY MODERN EUROPE, CA. 1300 TO 1700.
- Author
-
Gorski, Philip S.
- Subjects
- *
SECULARIZATION , *CHURCH & state , *RELIGION & sociology , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIAL structure - Abstract
In recent years, the sociology of religion has been consumed by a debate over secularization that pits advocates of a new, rational-choice paradigm (the so-called religious economies model) against defenders of classical secularization theory. According to the old paradigm, the Western world has become increasingly secular since the Middle Ages; according to the new paradigm, it has become increasingly religious. I put these two images of religious development to the test through a detailed examination of religious life in Western Europe before and after the Reformation. I conclude that the changes in social structure and religious experience that occurred during this period were considerably more complex than either the old or new paradigms suggest and, indeed, that the two paradigms are neither so opposed nor so irreconcilable as many of their defenders contend. It is possible, indeed probable, that Western society has become more secular without becoming less religious. I discuss the limitations of the two competing paradigms and sketch the outlines of a more adequate theory of religious change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF