RT Article T1 Post-secularism, religious knowledge and religious education JF Journal of beliefs and values VO 33 IS 2 SP 157 OP 168 A1 Carr, David LA English PB Routledge YR 2012 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1837735859 AB Post-secularism seems to follow in the wake of other (what are here called) ‘postal’ perspectives - post-structuralism, postmodernism, post-empiricism, post-positivism, post-analytical philosophy, post-foundationalism and so on - in questioning or repudiating what it takes to be the epistemic assumptions of ‘modernism.’ To be sure, post-secularism is especially concerned with one particular assumed implication of modernism - namely that there can be no epistemic warrant for religious faith or belief. While sympathetic to the post-secularist attempt to rehabilitate religious faith and commitment, this article considers three possible philosophical bases for the justification or dismissal of religious belief - pre-modernism, modernism and ‘postal’ perspectives - finding them all wanting. In their stead, the article develops a narrative account of religious meaning and understanding. On this view, religious texts, stories and myths - like other non-scientific narratives of wider literary and artistic culture - are crucial to the spiritual and moral cultivation of practical wisdom. K1 Education K1 Narratives K1 Post-secularism K1 Texts DO 10.1080/13617672.2012.694059