How My Millennial Students Found Their 'Hitchhiker's Guide' to a Secular Age

Philosopher Charles Taylor ends up doing what David Foster Wallace used to say a good novel is supposed to do: give us a sense that we aren’t alone.
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Professor Charles Taylor.
Neville Elder via Getty Images

Charles Taylor will receive the $1 million Berggruen Prize on Dec. 1 at the New York Public Library. 

When I announced in 2011 that my senior undergraduate seminar would be devoted to wading through Charles Taylor’s mammoth 900-page tome, “A Secular Age,” I wasn’t sure what to expect. Taylor is one of the world’s most celebrated thinkers, but I had my doubts that my students at Calvin College, a Christian liberal arts college of about 4,000 students, would want to wrestle with the work of this notoriously difficult Canadian philosopher. When the seminar table filled, I was intrigued. Either these students were gluttons for punishment, or Taylor’s questions about belief and unbelief in the 21st century had struck a nerve.

We began working through Taylor’s dense argument and I worried that we’d soon lose each other in the dark forest of his prose. Like with Hansel and Gretel, reading Taylor requires you bring breadcrumbs to trace an argument that has you bouncing from late medieval monasticism to German philosophy to lyrics from torch singer Peggy Lee.

But to my students’ astonishment (and mine), as they made their way through the book, lights went on for them, illuminating the world they live in in a new way. “It’s like he’s reading our mail,” one student said. If you’ve grown up in post-1960s North America, “A Secular Age,” which was published in 2007, is like an episode of “This is Your Life” or “Finding Your Roots”: It’s the backstory to the fractured world in which we find ourselves. For people who have strong beliefs, as many of my students do, living in a world that is secular is to experience belief haunted by doubt almost daily. And then that doubt is itself haunted by an enduring longing for something more ― what Taylor, a practicing Roman Catholic, calls a “fullness,” a sense of significance that has the punch of transcendence about it, even if we believe this world is all we’ve got.

“If God is dead, the only audience left to confirm our virtue is one another.”

What did this octogenarian philosopher help my millennial students see, and what did they see in him?

Well, for starters, he helped explain why their generation considers “authenticity” the predominant virtue. In Taylor’s telling, the way humans see and imagine the world ― what he calls our “social imaginary” ― shifted in modernity from being religious and largely Christian to become “the modern moral order.” Rather than being obligated to God or “higher” eternal norms, today our obligations are for the mutual benefit of society. My moral obligations are to my neighbor, and everyone is my neighbor — so my obligations are universal. While we might no longer be haunted by God or eternity, in a sense the stakes are raised even higher: I’m responsible for everyone, all the time. There is no end to my obligation, no parameters for my responsibility. In a sense, we have to fill the vacuum left by God’s death. Those are big shoes to fill.

But there is a flip side to this: If we’re all we’ve got, Taylor says, it means we’re always “on” not only because we are always responsible, but also because everybody’s watching. So we live in what Taylor calls an age of “mutual display” in which we show our individualism and virtue by making sure others see it. If God is dead, the only audience left to confirm our virtue is one another. David Foster Wallace got at this dynamic in a famous essay on television that is only more true in our internet age. What television did to us, Wallace argued, was turn us into watchers who expected to be watched. He, too, told a philosophical story about this, asking readers to imagine a “universe in which God is Nielsen.” Today, as my students explained, everyone is Nielsen, rating you

Taylor helped them make sense of the almost paralyzing self-consciousness that has descended upon them with the constant display/watch dynamic that attends social media. They know the exhaustion of what it means to always be “on,” and they are well aware of the judgmentalism they experience when they don’t “display” the right things in the right way. And they start to wonder if the all-seeing God might not have been a little more forgiving than the non-stop monitoring of Snapchat and Instagram.  

But Taylor also helped them understand a spiritual dynamic they experience. What makes ours a “secular” age, he writes, is not that it is defined by unbelief, but rather that belief is contestable and contested. Belief of every sort is “fragilized,” as Taylor puts it ― destabilized by rival accounts and doubts. For more traditional “believers,” this means their faith is attended by doubt as a constant companion. “Lord I believe, help thou my unbelief” (Mark 9:24) is a prayer they understand well.

But Taylor explains that it’s not only believers who suffer from doubt. In our secular age, the unbeliever can find herself tempted to believe. She may take up yoga, or sacrificially devote herself to causes of justice, or find herself strangely attracted to the Dominican nuns down the street who keep inviting her to spiritual retreats. The doubter’s doubt is faith. (As the novelist Julian Barnes admitted in his memoir, “Nothing to Be Frightened Of”: “I don’t believe in God, but I miss him.”)

“I don’t believe in God, but I miss him.”

- Julian Barnes

Unlike the world described to my students by religious fundamentalists, this is a world that they recognize. Taylor did justice to the complexity of their experience and the messiness of their spiritual lives, giving voice to their doubts, to be sure, but also giving them permission to admit they also still wanted to believe something more. There is a kind of sincerity about Taylor’s philosophical analysis that allowed them to step out of the cage of ironic cynicism. 

Taylor is the first to admit that “A Secular Age” is an heir to Romanticism: He is trying to offer a philosophy that gives due attention to what if feels like to live in the world ― a theoretical account that acknowledges the importance of our affections, our embodiment, all the visceral ways that we grope through the dizzying existence of our late modern world.

My students found in Taylor’s work a kind of “hitchhiker’s guide” to a secular age. But not everyone has the luxury of spending four months working through it. Which is why I decided, after that semester, to write a book about a book in an attempt to bring Taylor’s insights to a wider audience. The response has been quite overwhelming — people from all walks of life have told me that Taylor’s analysis gave them their bearings in the confusion of a secular age. Some religious believers told me it gave them permission to voice their doubts, to be honest about how hard it is to believe. Skeptics and atheists tell me Taylor puts a finger on the rumbling spirituality they can’t shake. So this big philosophical tome ends up doing what David Foster Wallace used to say a good novel is supposed to do: give us a sense that we aren’t alone. Someone understands us and has given names to the landscape we live in.

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Caspar David Friedrich's "Monastery Graveyard in the Snow"
CC/Caspar David Friedrich

Taylor’s book makes me think of an image by the Romantic German painter Caspar David Friedrich called Monastery Graveyard in the Snow. Stark, skeleton-like trees frame the ruins of a cloistered community. You can feel the chill of north winds blowing across the scene like the gales of enlightened disbelief blowing across Europe. The gravestones point to the dead who used to believe. (Fittingly, all we have is a black-and-white image of the painting, which was destroyed during World War II.) 

But then, when I look closer at this image, I notice that amidst those grave markers is a tiny band of monks, obstinate but haunted, still looking for something. Is it force of habit that propels them? Or has the enlightenment they were promised proven unfulfilling? Better to pray in the ruins than settle for disenchantment. Charles Taylor suggests that many of us are like this band of seekers: We see the ruins, we know the world has changed, we know there’s no going back. But we also can’t shake a hunger, a longing, a haunting that we welcome. 

See more videos of Charles Taylor here. This essay and these videos are a part of a series produced by the Berggruen Institute and Zocalo Public Square.

Editor’s note: The WorldPost is a partnership between the Berggruen Institute and The Huffington Post.

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Before You Go

Churches turned into secular buildings
A Church-Turned-Bookstore in Maastricht, the Netherlands(01 of56)
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This is the Boekhandel Selexyz Dominicanen, a 13th century Catholic Church that is now a spectacularly grand bookstore. But before it became a haven for readers, the old cathedral building was also reportedly used as a warehouse, an archive, and even a bicycle shed.

The church was transformed by the Amsterdam-based architects Merkx+Girod and now houses a three-storey bookshelf.

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A Church-Turned-Bar in Dublin, Ireland(04 of56)
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The Church is a bar, cafe, restaurant and nightclub in Dublin. Known formerly as St. Mary's Church, it was built in the early years of the 18th century.

The gorgeous Renatus Harris organ inside The Church was once played by George Frederic Handel, and Arthur Guinness, the founder of Guinness Brewery, was married in this sacred space back in 1761.

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A Church-Turned-Marketplace (And Many Other Things) in New York, New York(09 of56)
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This is the old Church of the Holy Communion, located in New York's Flatiron district. The 19th century Episcopal church has lived many lives since it stopped being used as a sacred space in 1976.

The building has been used as a commune, a nightclub (whose opening-night party was hosted by Andy Warhol), an upscale urban mall called Limelight Shops, and recently a Chinese restaurant.

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A Church-Turned-Residential Home in Victoria, Australia(12 of56)
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This is the Knox Church, a Gothic Revival style building that was constructed in Brighton, Victoria in the 1870s. The architects who turned the building into a family home, Williams Boag and Sonia Mangiapane, managed to keep much of its richly decorated interior, including its gorgeous stained glass windows.

Scroll down for images from inside the renovated Knox Church.
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A Church-Turned-Apartment Complex in Brooklyn, New York(25 of56)
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This is the former St. Mark's Protestant Episcopal Church, a 1888 Gothic Revival church located at 232 Adelphi Street in Fort Greene, Brooklyn. The building, which has been divided into 12 separate homes, still bears signs of its former use as a sacred space -- with stained glass windows, domed ceilings, and exposed brick.

Scroll down for images from inside the renovated St. Mark's Protestant Episcopal Church.
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A Church-Turned-Home in Belfast, Maine(32 of56)
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This Little Stone Church is located less than a mile away from Maine's Belfast Bay. It first opened in 1907 as a Dutch Reform church before being purchased by Christian Scientists in the 1960s. There are three bedrooms inside this gem, according to Zillow. The grounds around the church have been spruced up with a garden and shrubbery.

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A Church-Turned-Condominium in New York, New York(42 of56)
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This West Village Romanesque style building is the former home of the Washington Square United Methodist Church. Built in the late 1850s, the church became known as the "Peace Church" during the Vietnam War because of its activism. It also had a long history of welcoming LGBT Christians in New York. The building is now an eight unit condominium called Novare.

Scroll down for images from inside the renovated Washington Square United Methodist Church.
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A Church-Turned-Apartment Complex in Brooklyn, New York(46 of56)
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This Early Romanesque Revival church was built in 1857 in the Carroll Gardens neighborhood of Brooklyn. When it first opened as the South Congregational Church, the neighborhood was home to immigrants from Scandinavia. By 1940, the church was thriving and boasted a members list with 2,400 names. The building was granted landmark status by New York's Landmarks Preservation Commission in the 1980s, meaning that its exterior cannot be altered. The interior was remodeled into a number of luxury apartments that feature cathedral ceilings and stained glass windows.

Scroll down for images inside the Early Romanesque Revival church.
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A Synagogue-Turned-Townhouse in New York, New York(50 of56)
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This former synagogue, known as the 8th Street Shul, once served the Lower East Side's Jewish community. As Jews moved away from the neighborhood, the congregation dwindled down. The building has survived through two fires, and, at one point, was occupied by a East Village resident, who protested the idea of it being used at anything but a synagogue.

The space is now a three-bedroom townhouse with three outdoor terraces and cathedral ceilings. It is reportedly available to rent on AirBnB.

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