Abstract |
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This article addresses some widespread assumptions regarding the relationship between faith and citizenship, which seems to its author to be part of a received view. Introducing and discussing Husserl's interpretation of the cultural and political significance of faith, the author questions the correctness of these assumptions. The proposed analysis is meant to shed a somewhat different light on certain philosophical issues embedded in contemporary political debates on faith and citizenship, as well as on the relation phenomenology itself has with religion.
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