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Publication details

Year: 2017

Pages: 543-563

Series: Human Studies

Full citation:

K. Hoshikawa, Michael Staudigl, "A Schutzian analysis of prayer with perspectives from linguistic philosophy", Human Studies 40 (4), 2017, pp. 543-563.

A Schutzian analysis of prayer with perspectives from linguistic philosophy

K. Hoshikawa

Michael Staudigl

Universität Wien

pp. 543-563

in: Michael Staudigl (ed), Alfred Schutz and religion, Human Studies 40 (4), 2017.

Abstract

In this paper, we propose to analyze the phenomenon of Christian prayer by way of combining two different analytical frameworks. We start by applying Schutz's theories of "intersubjectivity," "inner time," "politheticality," and "multiple realities," and then proceed by drawing on the ideas and insights of linguistic philosophers, notably, Wittgenstein's "language-game," Austin's "speech act," and Evans's "logic of self-involvement". In conjoining these accounts, we wish to demonstrate how their combination sheds new light on understanding the phenomenon of prayer. Prayer is a complex phenomenon that involves two major dimensions: the private and the social, as Matthew (6: 6) and Acts (1: 14), respectively, demonstrate. Schutz's study of the phenomenon of "inner time" and the "polithetical" structure of consciousness, at both the subjective and intersubjective level, provides a useful lens to analyze these two dimensions. In addition, prayer, in following a specific set of rules, can also be considered as a specific, i.e., religious "language-game". In the last analysis, however, we propose to analyze prayer (and, finally, religion) within the Schutzian framework of "multiple realities," "enclaves," and "symbolic appresentation," which permits accessing the "religious finite province of meaning" in the very midst of the paramount reality of everyday life. In a nutshell, we claim that Christian prayer is a practice of constructing and living within a "religious province of meaning" in the everyday world; it is a practice that revolves around self-involving language-activities such as praising, confessing, thanksgiving, or requesting to God, which enable the praying subject to transfigure the language of everydayness and "see through" (Schutz) the world of everyday life in order to let it appear in a different light, e.g., the light of grace, gift, and salvation.

Cited authors

Publication details

Year: 2017

Pages: 543-563

Series: Human Studies

Full citation:

K. Hoshikawa, Michael Staudigl, "A Schutzian analysis of prayer with perspectives from linguistic philosophy", Human Studies 40 (4), 2017, pp. 543-563.