The authors draw attention to Charles Taylor’s A Secular Age in their analysis, inferring that perhaps the reason for the complicated outlook of religion is that “many facets of life in advanced societies are inhospitable to religious belief… including an ongoing ideological fragmentation that is exacerbated by expressive individualism, decline in our understanding of some of the great languages of transcendence, and the individual pursuit of happiness as defined by consumer cultures.” Kanji and Kuipers present a convincing argument of the complicated nature of religion in Canada. This analysis can be seen to communicate with the process of secularisation on a global scale; although Canada, according to the World Value Survey, is more religious than other advanced industrial states, some aspects of religion worldwide have survived better than others and thus the condition of religion and secularisation processes as a whole can be considered more complicated than theorists such as Jose Casanova suggested in their
The authors draw attention to Charles Taylor’s A Secular Age in their analysis, inferring that perhaps the reason for the complicated outlook of religion is that “many facets of life in advanced societies are inhospitable to religious belief… including an ongoing ideological fragmentation that is exacerbated by expressive individualism, decline in our understanding of some of the great languages of transcendence, and the individual pursuit of happiness as defined by consumer cultures.” Kanji and Kuipers present a convincing argument of the complicated nature of religion in Canada. This analysis can be seen to communicate with the process of secularisation on a global scale; although Canada, according to the World Value Survey, is more religious than other advanced industrial states, some aspects of religion worldwide have survived better than others and thus the condition of religion and secularisation processes as a whole can be considered more complicated than theorists such as Jose Casanova suggested in their