Religion, Society and Secular Values

Philosophy 91 (3):321-343 (2016)
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Abstract

Our paradigm for religion is Christianity, which appeared as a sub-society, the culture of which differed both from Jewish culture and from that of the Greeks and Romans. Human beings are essentially social, depending upon society for all rational thought and activity. As social beings we live with regard to customs we think good on the whole. Customs are rationalised by theoretical and moral beliefs. They contrast with nature and also with convention and habit. Religions, like families, are societies intermediate between individuals and states. So-called secular values concern the same things as religious and have comparable practical consequences.

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XIV—The Perception of Heat.Colin Strang - 1961 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 61 (1):239-252.

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