David Tacey
Auteur van The Spirituality Revolution: The Emergence of Contemporary Spirituality
Over de Auteur
David Tacey was born in Melbourne and his family later moved to Alice Springs, central Australia. He spent his adolescence and early adulthood living alongside Aboriginal cultures. This brought about his lifelong interest in Aboriginal religions and the spiritual relationship between land, nature toon meer and human consciousness. He studied literature, philosophy and art history in his Bachelor of Arts degree at Flinders University, and earned his PhD at Adelaide University in literature and psychoanalysis. After winning the Bentham Prize at Adelaide he was one of four Australians to be awarded a post-doctoral fellowship by the Harkness Foundation, New York. He has published 14 books, 70 refereed essays in journals, 45 chapters in edited volumes, and 50 articles in non-refereed journals and magazines. David Tracey has maintained a commitment to public awareness in the areas of religious education, indigenous health, men's issues and environmental issues. He is currently Emeritus Professor of Literature at La Trobe University in Melbourne and Research Professor at the Australian Centre for Christianity and Culture in Canberra. (Bowker Author Biography) toon minder
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The problem with some commentators, and to some extent Tacey, is that they confuse atheism as being nonspiritual. Atheism is exactly what the word says, non-theistic, no belief in a God. That is not the same as refuting some kind of spirituality minus a God figure. Those people reduce the options to literalism or atheism, then propose a way to salvage one of the religions but without using the word God. Oh well, I do think the essence of the task will lead to what many already do, accept that religions have many wonderful things to offer but are in fact false in their current form. Making the understanding metaphorical, as the works were intended in the first place, will lead to a spiritual world one hopes.
Tacey makes a wonderful argument for how to read the Christian religion as metaphor. Yes, he does keep pointing out the very serious errors in fundamentalism's literalism, but that is justified since fundamentalism (regardless of which religion) is the most dangerous force in the world today.
I would recommend this book to everyone who wants to understand how they can be rational and spiritual at the same time. Many of us do so without salvaging one of the religions but for most it will be necessary to maintain some connection to their comfort zone and this book shows how one can do so.
Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via Edelweiss.… (meer)