Postmodernist Relativism: A Return to Polytheism?
Author(s) -
Lorena Ortiz Cabrero
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the maastricht journal of liberal arts
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2542-7741
pISSN - 2542-7733
DOI - 10.26481/mjla.2018.v10.581
Subject(s) - relativism , buddhism , epistemology , distancing , theism , meditation , spirituality , ambiguity , philosophy , realisation , sociology , covid-19 , theology , medicine , linguistics , physics , alternative medicine , disease , pathology , quantum mechanics , infectious disease (medical specialty)
Despite distancing themselves from traditional religions, (Western) post-secular societies are still heavily concerned with ‘spirituality’ and other forms of self-realisation. Within our working postmodernist framework, where ‘truth’, ‘knowledge’ and ‘God’ are found to be relative, this concern often translates into a combination of religiously inspired practices – such as (Hinduist) yoga or (Buddhist) meditation – and a scientific, modern approach to the knowledge of the world. Can this coexistence of practices be a new kind of polytheism? This paper shows that postmodernist, relativistic belief systems share the poly-, or multiplicity of approaches to life and reality, but not the -theist, or conceptualisation of their beliefs as ‘divine’.
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