Creed
Philosopher and cultural theorist Kwame Anthony Appiah argues that we overestimate the importance of scripture and underestimate practice when thinking about religion.
Philosopher and cultural theorist Kwame Anthony Appiah argues that when considering religion we overestimate the importance of scripture and underestimate the importance of practice.
He begins with the complexities of his own background, as the son of an English Anglican mother and a Ghanaian Methodist father. He turns to the idea that religious faith is based around unchanging and unchangeable holy scriptures. He argues that over the millennia religious practice has been quite as important as religious writings. He provides examples from Jewish, Christian, Islamic and Buddhist texts to show that they are often contradictory and have been interpreted in different ways at different times, for example on the position of women and men in Islam. He argues that fundamentalists are a particularly extreme example of this mistaken scriptural determinism.
The lecture is recorded in front of audience at the London School of Economics and Political Science. The series is presented and chaired by Sue Lawley. Future lectures will examine identity in the contexts of country, colour and culture.
The producer is Jim Frank.
Last on
More episodes
Previous
You are at the first episode
Sonia Sodha reflects on the first of Kwame Anthony Appiah's Reith Lectures.
鈥淚f scriptures were not open for interpretation鈥 they would not continue to guide people鈥
Kwame Anthony Appiah argues that the openness of religious texts is a "feature".
Read Kwame Anthony Appiah's first lecture, Creed.
Broadcasts
- Tue 18 Oct 2016 09:00麻豆社 Radio 4
- Sat 22 Oct 2016 22:15麻豆社 Radio 4
The Identity Quiz: Do you know who you are?
Match the correct person to the quote.
The Identity Quiz: Do you know who you are?
Match the correct person to the quote.
New to the Reith Lectures? Here鈥檚 where to start
Four lectures recommended by the series producer.
Podcast
-
The Reith Lectures
Significant international thinkers deliver the 麻豆社's flagship annual lecture series