TY - JOUR AU - Atanasescu, Adrian Nicolae PY - 2019/12/20 Y2 - 2024/03/28 TI - Jurgen Habermas' turn to a "post-secular society": from sublation of the sacred to translation of the sacred JF - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion JA - EJPR VL - 11 IS - 4 SE - Special Issue - Habermas on Religion DO - 10.24204/ejpr.v11i4.2834 UR - https://www.philosophy-of-religion.eu/index.php/ejpr/article/view/2834 SP - 113-136 AB - In this article I place Jurgen Habermas' recent turn to a "post-secular society" in the context of his previous defence of a "postmetaphysical" view of modernity. My argument is that the concept of "postsecular" introduces significant normative tensions for the formal and pragmatic view of reason defended by Habermas in previous work. In particular, the turn to a "post-secular society" threatens the evolutionary narrative that Habermas (following Weber) espoused in The Theory of Communicative Action (1981, 1987), The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity (1990) or Postmetaphysical Thinking (1992), according to which modern "communicative" reason dialecticlly supersedes religion. If this narrative is undermined, I argue, the claim to universality of "communicative" reason is also undermined. Thus, the benefits Habermas seeks to obtain from translation of religion are offset by a destabilization of tenets central to a "postmetaphysical" view of modernity. ER -