Sen McGlinn
A translator and academic editor by profession, I research on the Bahai Faith, concentrating on its social teachings as they are set out by Baha'u'llah, Abdu'l-Baha and Shoghi Effendi, also by the Bab, and in Islam, Christianity and Judaism so far as these correlate with the works of Baha'u'llah and Abdu'l-Baha. I translate into English from Dutch, Persian, Arabic and (rarely) other European and classical languages.
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The functional differentiation of society means that government, religion, commerce, art, education and science are increasingly independent, have different social functions, relate differently to one another, and that their lived meanings for us are different. Functional differentiation also drives the pluralism and relativism, global scope and individualisation that characterise postmodern society. In a society in which religious ritual is the mirror of individual distinctiveness, not of collective identity, in which permanent pluralism means that no one religion can provide common norms and values (and no ideology should try), and in which the norms of one sphere of life are not transferred to other spheres, religion must find a new understanding of itself, and a new job description for its role in society. The 20th century has taught us that economic affairs cannot be governed by political ideologies, that science must be free of doctrine and political agendas, that church and state must be separated. But it has not provided us with a new world view that explains the postmodern world that we actually experience. This book draws on the Bahai scriptures, and the Bible and Quran, to show that the differentiation and globalisation of postmodern society are signs that the Kingdom of God is growing in the world.