Appropriating religion: understanding religion as an object of science

Authors

  • Donald Wiebe University of Toronto

Keywords:

Philosophy and religion, Methodology, Religion -- Definition, Religion -- Study, Science, Social sciences, Humanities

Abstract

In this paper, the author focuses on the study of religion as a scientific project, for it is the scientific interest in religion which has constituted the grounds for admitting the study of religion into the curriculum of the modern Western university. Despite that academic legitimation, however, the study of religion in the setting of the modern research university is not held in high esteem relative to the other sciences. It if the scientific study of religion is to be legitimately ensconced in the modern research university, the notion of religion will have to be wholly appropriated by science; only then will we be able to establish a conceptual foundation from which to make valid knowledge claims about religion on a level commensurate with the pronouncements of the natural and social sciences. Indeed, to go one step further, given the hold on the concept of religion by those committed to the humanistic study of religion, we might need to talk here not of the appropriation but of expropriation of religion by science—that is, of wresting ownership of the concept from the humanists by using it solely as a taxonomic device to differentiate and explain a peculiar range of human behaviour demonstrated in religious practices.
Section
Articles

Published

1999-01-01

How to Cite

Wiebe, D. (1999). Appropriating religion: understanding religion as an object of science. Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis, 17(1), 253–272. https://doi.org/10.30674/scripta.67258