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B. Seligman is Professor of Religion at Boston University and Research
Associate at the Institute for the Study of Economic Culture there.
He has lived and taught at universities in this country, in Israel
and in Hungary where he was a Fulbright Fellow from 1990-1992. He
lived close to twenty years in Israel where he was a member of Kibbutz
Kerem Shalom in the early 1970s. His books include The
Idea of Civil Society (Free Press, 1992), Inner-worldly
Individualism (Transaction Press, 1994), The Problem of
Trust (Princeton University Press, 1997), Modernitys
Wager: Authority, The Self and Transcendence (Princeton
University Press, 2000) and with Mark Lichbach Market and Community
(Penn State University Press, 2000). His work has been translated
into a dozen languages. At present, with the help of major grants
from The Ford Foundation and Pew Charitable Trusts, he is working
on the problem of religion and toleration. Part of this work is
devoted to establishing school curricula for teaching tolerance
from a religious perspective. In this endeavor he is working with
colleagues in Berlin, Sarajevo and Jerusalem. His latest book, Modest
Claims, Dialogues and Essays on Tolerance and Tradition will
be published with Notre Dame University Press in 2003. He lives
in Newton, Massachusetts with his wife and two daughters.
Courses
RN 250 Introduction to the Sociology of Religion
RN 465/795 Religion & Society
RN 495/795 Theory of Religion I
RN 496/796 Theory of Religion II
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