Reading Terry Eagleton’s Culture and the Death of God (2014)
Only read the first chapter The Limits of Enlightenment, but already finding lots of interest. In fact the style despite his usual sardonic wit is more academic paper (based on what was originally a lecture) with lots of referenced quotes to make his arguments. A couple of things to note for now:
For me, Gibbon’s “celebrated sentence”:
“The various modes of worship which prevailed in the Roman world, were all considered by the people as equally true; by the philosophers as equally false; and by the magistrates as equally useful.” (Quoted previously).
For the MoQists:
“The two camps, rational and experiential, are for the most part speaking past each other”
“In one sense, feeling is the most incontrovertible of grounds, while in another sense it is a notoriously slippery one.”