New Political Religions, or an Analysis of Modern Terrorism
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Word Count
60,500 words, Guess
Page Count
242 pages
Physical Format
Hardcover
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL8166446M
- ISBN-139780826215314
- ISBN-100826215319
- OCLC Control Number54279940
- OCLC Control Numbernewpoliticalreli00coop
and 3 more
- Library of Congress Control Number2004001828
- Goodreads6523344
- LibraryThing3637593
Classifications
- LCCHV6431 .C656 2004
Description
"In New Political Religions, or an Analysis of Modern Terrorism, Barry Cooper applies the insights of Eric Voegelin to the phenomenon of modern terrorism. Cooper points out that the chief omission from most contemporary studies of terrorism is an analysis of the "spiritual motivation" that is central to the actions of terrorists today. When spiritual elements are discussed in conventional literature, they are grouped under the opaque term religion. A more conceptually adequate approach is provided by Voegelin's political science and, in particular, by his Shellingian term pneumopathology - a disease of the spirit." "While terrorism has been used throughout the ages as a weapon in political struggles, there is an essential difference between groups who use these tactics for more or less rational political goals and those seeking more apocalyptic ends. Cooper argues that today's terrorists have a spiritual perversity that causes them to place greater significance on killing than on exploiting political grievances. He supports his assertion with an analysis of two groups that share the characteristics of a pneumopathological consciousness - Anum Shinrikyo, the terrorist organization that poisoned thousands of Tokyo subway riders in 1995, and Al-Qaeda, the group behind the infamous 9/11 killings." "In the ongoing conversations among specialists in terrorist studies, as well as the ordinary discourse of citizens in western democracies wishing to understand the world around them, this book will add a distinctive voice."--BOOK JACKET.
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