Miguel wrote:
"In "Religion After Naturalism," Eric Steinhart thinks that philosophy of religion has gotten stuck because its conception of religion sets it against naturalism. As more and more people come to realize that naturalism is true, philosophy of religion is in danger of fading away much like theorizing about outdated scienc"
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
Is the idea of a kind of crisis in philosophy of religion being pushed, basically, by philosophers committed to atheism and metaphysical naturalism? Because they feel that there are too many theists working in the field?
As far as the fact that philosophy of religion coming from Western universities is slanted towards the Judeo-Christian tradition, this does not seem so surprising given the cultural background of many of their academics. It may change over time as the ethnic composition of many Western European countries changes. There should be more potential students from Islamic backgrounds for example.
I can't see though that emphasising metaphysical naturalism as a way of structuring the field would contribute to widening it to other religious traditions though. Some of these, as in China, Vietnam and other Communist/ex-Communist states, have probably been struggling with imposed atheistic worldviews in academic contexts anyway.