How can we live in such a way that we die only once? How can we organize a society that gives us a better chance to be fully alive? How can we reinvent religion so that it liberates us instead of consoling us?
These questions stand at the center of Roberto Mangabeira Unger's The Religion of the Future an argument for both spiritual and political revolution. It proposes the content of a religion that can survive without faith in a transcendent God or in life after death. According to this religion--the religion of the future--human beings can be more human by becoming more godlike, not just later, in another life or another time, but right now, on Earth and in their own lives. They can become more godlike without denying the irreparable flaws in the human condition: our mortality, groundlessness, and insatiability.
"Excels by depth as well as by a wide-reaching erudition ... A powerful work."
--Louis Dupré, Journal of Religion
Praise for Roberto Mangabeira Unger:
"A philosophical mind out of the Third World turning tables, to become a synoptist and seer of the First."
--Perry Anderson
"A restless visionary."
--New York Times
"One of the few living philosophers whose thinking has the range of the great philosophers of the past."
--Lee Smolin, Times Higher Education Supplement
"His ideas are wide-ranging but essentially amount to a passionate call to stop thinking about everything in terms of economics and finance, what he calls 'the dictatorship of no alternatives.'"
--Financial Times