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Far Glory The Quest for Faith in an Age of Credulity

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ISBN-10: 0029029309

ISBN-13: 9780029029305

Edition: 1992

Authors: Peter L. Berger

List price: $27.95
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Description:

In this discussion of social and religious ideas, Berger discusses such issues as the meaning and consequences of secularization and pluralism, the status of the self, the link between faith and identity, the meaning of transcendent experience, and the problem of moral action.
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Book details

List price: $27.95
Copyright year: 1992
Publisher: Free Press
Publication date: 10/12/1992
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 232
Size: 6.00" wide x 8.75" long x 0.75" tall
Weight: 0.836
Language: English

Peter L. Berger is a Viennese-born American sociologist educated at Wagner College and the New School for Social Research in New York. He teaches at Boston University and directs the Institute for the Study of Economic Culture. Berger's work has focused on the sociology of knowledge, the sociology of economics, and the sociology of religion. His closest collaborator has been his wife, Brigitte Kellner Berger, who coauthored several volumes with him and has been a central influence on his work. Berger is perhaps best known for The Social Construction of Reality (1967) which he wrote with Thomas Luckmann. In this book, considered one of the most important works on the sociology of knowledge…    

Prefatory Note
The Social Context of Belief
Prologue: Amid Different Follies
Secularization and Pluralism
Religion and Cultural Conflict in America Today
The West and the Challenge of Cultural Pluralism
Believers and Belief
The Solitary Believer
Excursus: Robert Musil and the Salvage of the Self
The Act of Belief
The One Who Is Believed
The Consequences of Believing
The Problem of Ecclesial Belonging
The Problem of Moral Action
Epilogue: The Burden of Silence