Religion and its Modern Critics (REL 263)

Spring 2025

Taught by Gabriel Citron

Course Description: The most penetrating critiques of Christianity have the power to unsettle our sense of self and disrupt our most natural ways of being - for Christians and non-Christians alike. For these critiques don't focus on attacking religious beliefs alone; rather, they target many of the deepest values, attitudes, and tendencies at the core of Christianity and Christian-molded cultures, and perhaps even at the core of our humanity. This course explores some of the key 19th and 20th century critiques of Christianity. It will involve opening ourselves up to the self-reckoning demanded by the likes of Kierkegaard, Emerson, Nietzsche, Baldwin, and Butler.

You may read more about this course on the Registrar’s page.

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Who Is My Neighbor? (FRS 194)

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What Should We Eat? Ethics, Religion, Politics (REL 365/PHI 366/CHV 316)