Cultural Revolutions
Reason Versus Culture in Philosophy, Politics, and Jihad
Author(s)
Cahoone, Lawrence
Collection
Knowledge Unlatched (KU)Number
100091Language
EnglishAbstract
Cultural Revolutions argues that reason itself is cultural, but no less reasonable for it. Lawrence Cahoone systematically defines culture and gauges the consequences of the ineradicably cultural nature of cognition and action, yet argues that none of this implies relativism. Cahoone offers a definition of culture as teleologically organized practices, artifacts, and narratives and analyzes the notion of cultural membership in relation to race, ethnicity, and “primordialism.” He provides a theory of culture’s role in how we form our sense of reality and argues that the proper conception of culture dissolves “the problem” of cultural relativism.
Applying this perspective to Islamic fundamentalism, Cahoone identifies its conflict with the West as representing the break between two of three historically distinctive forms of reason. Rather than being “irrational,” he shows, fundamentalism embodies a rationality only recently devalued—but not entirely abandoned—by the West.
Keywords
Philosophy; Islam; Liberalism; ModernityDOI
10.26530/oapen_625750ISBN
9780271030241OCN
71281417Publisher
Penn State University PressPublisher website
http://www.psupress.org/Publication date and place
University Park, PA, 2005Classification
Philosophy