May 2014
Beginner
376 pages
13h 21m
English
A scientific study of religion was first proposed by the comparative philologist Max Müller, widely considered to be one of the founders of the modern academic study of religion. The philosopher of religion Donald Wiebe has argued, correctly I think, that the “new spirit of inquiry,” which Müller proposed for this study (Müller 1881 [1867], xii), was—despite his personal religious commitments—nevertheless fully engaged with the scientific impulse that swept Europe at the end of the nineteenth-century. Wiebe concludes that “the explicit agenda adopted by…[Müller—and by other] founders of Religious Studies as an academic (university) concern committed the enterprise ...
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