Popis: |
In the Elementary forms of religious life , Durkheim notoriously addresses modern philosophy from the perspective of his twofold path, opposing rationalism and empiricism. In this contribution, I intend to show how another alternative is at work in the text, the one that confronts Spinoza’s naturalism and Kant’s transcendentalism. Spinozism and Kantianism are here understood as the two main intellectual options in order to think the autonomy of human reason and its relation to religion and critique in the Enlightenment tradition. The article suggests that Durkheim’s reflection on the social origins of human knowledge and his criticism of an aprioristic account of the categories push his reflection toward a Spinozist standpoint. Nonetheless, his denial of the possibility to treat the positivity of religious life via the Enlightenment’s opposition between reason and belief entails – thanks to his theory of totemism - a criticism of Spinoza’s naturalism alike. In particular, what is at stake in his book is the possibility to give a sociological account of the notion of totality and, in this way, to radically revise our understanding of the autonomy of human reason by means of a socio-historical account of religious life. In this perspective, Durkheim’s argument not only stages a main alternative of modern philosophy, but also suggests that the task of sociology is to overcome it. |