“Meaning” and “religion” appear as deeply interlinked concepts in modern thought. Theology has often discovered religious faith as a “source of meaning” against a background of “meaninglessness”, as the XX century existentialist philosophies would remark. Beyond such an apologetic stance, some philosophies of religion have tried to better describe such a link: hermeneutics, phenomenology and even systems theory, may be accounted as main attempts to tackle this very complex framework, and to show how religion provides meaning, or is built trough structures of meaning, or is a form of “meaning-construction”. Cognitive approach may add new perspectives to better explain this implication. Recent attempts combine scientific methods and philosoph...
That there exists something like religion seems self-evident. Anthropologists, we are told, have dis...
This essay argues that the approach to meaning articulated by Donald Davidson supplies all the stude...
The study of religion is by its nature and by its history multi-disciplinary. The contribution of ne...
“Meaning” and “religion” appear as deeply interlinked concepts in modern thought. Theology has often...
Religion and spirituality, though not uniquely, have strong affinities with people’s search for mean...
This paper explores the question of how religious symbolism functions to provide a more meaningful o...
A review of recent research suggests that academic and popular distinctions between “religion” and “...
What is religion? What does the concept of religion mean? Today, the word ‘religion’ appears everywh...
Based on the articles brought together for this special issue, this article proposes a transversal a...
There is longstanding tension in the study of religion between those who believe religion can be red...
Can we be mistaken or ignorant about the meaning of our own words? This dissertation explores this q...
The disenchantment of reality has bankrupted conventional sources of meaning for many people in mode...
As an exercise in hermeneutics this study explores the relation between various concepts of evil and...
Discussions of nonreligion or secularity face a central challenge that has long plagued scholars of ...
The purpose of this review paper is to present a case for more proximal and emic approaches to the s...
That there exists something like religion seems self-evident. Anthropologists, we are told, have dis...
This essay argues that the approach to meaning articulated by Donald Davidson supplies all the stude...
The study of religion is by its nature and by its history multi-disciplinary. The contribution of ne...
“Meaning” and “religion” appear as deeply interlinked concepts in modern thought. Theology has often...
Religion and spirituality, though not uniquely, have strong affinities with people’s search for mean...
This paper explores the question of how religious symbolism functions to provide a more meaningful o...
A review of recent research suggests that academic and popular distinctions between “religion” and “...
What is religion? What does the concept of religion mean? Today, the word ‘religion’ appears everywh...
Based on the articles brought together for this special issue, this article proposes a transversal a...
There is longstanding tension in the study of religion between those who believe religion can be red...
Can we be mistaken or ignorant about the meaning of our own words? This dissertation explores this q...
The disenchantment of reality has bankrupted conventional sources of meaning for many people in mode...
As an exercise in hermeneutics this study explores the relation between various concepts of evil and...
Discussions of nonreligion or secularity face a central challenge that has long plagued scholars of ...
The purpose of this review paper is to present a case for more proximal and emic approaches to the s...
That there exists something like religion seems self-evident. Anthropologists, we are told, have dis...
This essay argues that the approach to meaning articulated by Donald Davidson supplies all the stude...
The study of religion is by its nature and by its history multi-disciplinary. The contribution of ne...