ABSTRACT
This article questions the distinction between the sacred and the profane and, by taking phenomenology as its guide, suggests going beyond an “archaeological” or natural understanding of religion, toward a phenomenology of religion informed by temporality and futurity.
anamnesis, mimesis, myth, phenomenology of religion, psychoanalysis and religion, ritual, the sacred
Copyright © 2019 by The Pennsylvania State University. All rights reserved.
2019
The Pennsylvania State University
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