Since Eric sent out the sections on Lecture 2, I thought I'd repost Jesse's questions...does anyone have thoughts (even if you haven't done all the readings)?

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And here are a few questions for this week's Varieties reading: 

- James says he won't try to define religion, but will instead just "circumscribe the topic" of his own lectures in an "arbitrary" way. Do you agree that there is no one quality that defines all religion? 

- James defines the topic of the lectures as "the feelings, acts, and experiences of individual men in their solitude, so far as they apprehend themselves to stand in relation to whatever they may consider the divine," and goes on to define the divine as follows: "gods are conceived to be first things in the way of being and power. They overarch and envelop, and from them there is no escape. What relates to them is the first and last word in the way of truth. Whatever then were most primal and enveloping and deeply true might at this rate be treated as godlike, and a man's religion might thus be identified with his attitude, whatever it might be, toward what he felt to be the primal truth." First and last words in the way of truth, primal truth ... these are deeply unpragmatic ideas. James could have defined divinity in a more pragmatically acceptable way (as Dewey does in his book A Common Faith). Why do you think he defines it in terms that his philosophy is so ill-equipped to incorporate (even if people's attitudes towards itcan be pragmatically weighed)?

- Most religions claim to be the source of morality, but James distinguishes between the religious and the moral, locating the religious in a place "beyond" the moral. What do you think of this distinction?