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Intro
Contents
Contributors
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Reading Tea Leaves, Drinking Tea: Four Transformations in Philosophy of Religion
2.1 Introduction
2.2 The Global Transformation
2.3 The Critical Transformation
2.4 The Multidisciplinary Transformation
2.5 The Practical Transformation
2.6 Conclusion
Reference
Chapter 3: What Religious Studies Can Teach the Humanities: A Philosophical Perspective
3.1 Introduction: Towards a Return of Philosophy to Religious Studies
3.2 Tyler Roberts against the "New Locativists."

3.3 Excursus: Practical Reason and the First-Person Perspective
3.4 Practical Reason and Humanistic Inquiry
3.5 Does Being human Necessarily Imply Being religious?
3.6 Theology, Religious Studies, and the First Amendment
3.7 Concluding Unscientific Postscript
References
Chapter 4: Religious Practices and the Formation of Subjects
4.1 Towards a Philosophy of Religious Practices
4.2 Hermeneutic and Disciplinary in the Study of Religious Practices
4.3 Reconciling the Hermeneutic and the Disciplinary Approaches

4.4 The Embodiment Approach to the Study of Religious Practices
References
Chapter 5: Philosophy of Lived Religion: The Next Revolution?
5.1 Introduction: Why Philosophy of Lived Religion?
5.2 What Is Philosophy of Lived Religion?
5.3 The Philosophy of Whose Lived Religion, When, and Where?
5.4 How to Philosophize about Lived Religion?
5.5 Why Philosophize about Lived Religion?
5.6 Conclusion: Philosophy of Lived Religion as Lived Philosophy of Religion
References

Chapter 6: Liturgical Philosophy of Religion: An Untimely Manifesto about Sincerity, Acceptance, and Hope
6.1 Philosophy of Religion in the Twenty-First Century
6.2 Liturgical Attitudes
6.2.1 Belief
6.2.2 Acceptance
6.2.3 Hope and Trust
6.3 Liturgical Objects
6.4 Philosophy of the Liturgy
6.5 Conclusion
References
Chapter 7: Belief that Matters: Religion, Anti-Black Racism and the Future of the Philosophy of Religion
7.1 Introduction
7.2 The American Religion of Racism
7.3 Dematerializing Belief
7.4 Racism and the Ethics of Belief
References

Chapter 8: Critical Theory, Conspiracy, and "Gullible Critique"
8.1 Introduction
8.2 The Critical Ethos
8.3 On Suspicious Explanations
8.4 Critique and Conspiracy: Reflections
References
Chapter 9: Learning to Do Philosophy of Religion in the Anthropocene
9.1 Introduction
9.2 Interruption: Roy Scranton
9.3 Beyond Modern Framing: Amitav Ghosh
9.4 Postsecular Anthropocene: Bronislaw Szerszynski
9.5 Love and Extinction: Deborah Bird Rose
9.6 Conclusion: Problems of Evil and Good in the Anthropocene
References

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