Abstract
This engaging little book strays far from the mainstream of recent philosophy of religion—but for good reason and to good effect. Burke repudiates the parochialism implicit in the recent preoccupation with linguistic meaning, arguments for God’s existence, and problems of immortality. Most recent texts in the field display a "relentlessly Western, even Anglo-Saxon tunnel vision", viewing only a limited form of human religiosity in terms of some narrowing perspective. Hoping to break new ground, Burke treats religion as a universal human phenomenon and tries to illumine its various central "functions" or purposes without casting them in an alien light. His method is expository, descriptive, "analytic," in an unusual sense, and non-argumentative. He attempts to display religious structures in such a perspicuous way that philosophical insight or "recognition" may occur. The result is, as the author notes, "one man’s perspective", yet it is a perspective informed by a great variety of thinkers from various reaches of sociology, theology and philosophy.