Herman, I read Brooks' article this morning somewhat hastily. What I thought he missed was the subtle distinction between belief (intellectual assent) and faith ("you-bet-your-life" trust), which is a very healthy and informative conversation going on today in certain circles. Whether he (Brooks) does justice to Taylor's book, I do not know, but on what appears to be the same subject I would recommend The Future of Faith by Harvey Cox and Thank God for Evolution by Michael Dowd. Dowd's book, which I suspect you are familiar with, is about the marriage of science and religion, which he explains thoroughly and, for my money, quite convincingly. Randy No change without action, no action without thought. -Anonymous From: Herman Greene <hfgreenenc@gmail.com> To: OE Listserv <oe@lists.wedgeblade.net> Sent: Tuesday, July 9, 2013 4:22 PM Subject: [Oe List ...] A review of Charles Taylor's "The Secular Society" It's no doubt hard to do a book review in the constraints of a NYC op-ed column. David Brooks tries, but I'm not tuning in to the richness of his review. Still I thought this may be of interest to you who taught about an urban, scientific and secular world. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/09/opinion/brooks-the-secular-society.html?hp -- __________________________________________________ Herman F. Greene 2516 Winningham Road Chapel Hill, NC 27516 919-942-4358 (ph & fax) hfgreenenc@gmail.com _______________________________________________ OE mailing list OE@lists.wedgeblade.net http://lists.wedgeblade.net/listinfo.cgi/oe-wedgeblade.net