TY - BOOK AU - Weir,Todd H. TI - Secularism and religion in nineteenth-century Germany: the rise of the fourth confession PY - 2014/// CY - New York PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Germany KW - History KW - 19th century KW - Religion KW - Secularism KW - Electronic books N1 - E-Book-ACLS / Zugriff nur im DHI-Lesesaal; American Council of Learned Societies/ https://www.humanitiesebook.org/about; Includes bibliographical references (pages 283-292) and index; Dissidence and confession, 1845 to 1847 -- Free religious worldview : from Christian rationalism to naturalistic monism -- The sociology of dissent : free religion and popular science -- Politics and free religion in the 1860s and 1870s -- Secularism in the Berlin Kulturkampf, 1869-1880 -- From worldview to ethics : secularism and the "Jewish question," 1878-1892 -- Secularism in Wilhelmine Germany N2 - "Negotiating the boundaries of the secular and of the religious is a core aspect of modern experience. In mid-nineteenth-century Germany, secularism emerged to oppose church establishment, conservative orthodoxy, and national division between Catholics, Protestants, and Jews. Yet, as historian Todd H. Weir argues in this provocative book, early secularism was not the opposite of religion. It developed in the rationalist dissent of Free Religion and, even as secularism took more atheistic forms in Freethought and Monism, it was subject to the forces of the confessional system it sought to dismantle. Similar to its religious competitors, it elaborated a clear worldview, sustained social milieus, and was integrated into the political system. Secularism was, in many ways, Germany's fourth confession. While challenging assumptions about the causes and course of the Kulturkampf and modern antisemitism, this study casts new light on the history of popular science, radical politics, and social reform"--Provided by publisher UR - https://hdl.handle.net/2027/heb40032 ER -