Dictionary of Philosophy of Religion

(Amelia) #1

LAMAISM


136

of God.” The male Father God remains
central to Lacan’s understanding of the
social-symbolic structures of language,
and so, the condition of all meaning and
values: “His” constitutive role in structur-
ing the language of the unconscious, in
turn, constitutes patriarchal authority,
gender, and relations of sexual difference.
These strongly masculine values lead
feminist psycholinguists like Julia
Kristeva (Tales of Love, 1987) to critical
engagement with Lacanian forms of anal-
ysis. Lacan’s works include a series of his
seminars (in 28 vols., 1954–1980) and
Écrits (1966).


LAMAISM. See DALAI LAMA.


LANGUAGE. See RELIGIOUS
LANGUAGE.


LANGUAGE-GAMES. A term derived
from Wittgenstein who held that there are
different domains of discourse with their
own set of rules and customs. Some claim
that the language game of religion may be
said to be different from the language
game of science. Talk of language games
in the mid-twentieth century was part
of a general philosophy that recognized
diverse, appropriate forms of discourse
and a tendency to displace scientific
discourse as the most prestigious and
authoritative.


LAOZI (a.k.a. Lao-Tzu) (c. 6th BCE).
Laozi (“the Old Master”) is the purported
author of the Daodejing, a text also known
as the Laozi. He is considered the founder
of Daoism. There is no contemporaneous
information on Laozi, and his historicity
is debatable. The text attributed to him
may have had more than one author.
The Daodejing evokes a Dao (“Way”),
an ultimate reality that cannot be
described in language or through rational
discourse, but can only be grasped intui-
tively. Using indirect language, particu-
larly paradox and analogy, the Daodejing
suggests a natural order in opposition to
human institutions. Passivity and humil-
ity are virtues. Water, for example, is soft
and yielding yet able to wear down stone.
The Daodejing rejects the Confucian
stress on ritual, propriety, and moral self-
cultivation. Its ideal of wuwei (“non-
action”) eschews purposeful action in
favor of simple and natural behavior.

LAPLACE, PIERRE SIMON DE (1749–
1827). A French astronomer famous for
claiming that in his science he had no
need for God as a hypothesis. LaPlace
articulated a strong form of determinism.
His most influential work is A Philosophi-
cal Essay on Probabilities (1814).

LEIBNIZ, GOTTFRIED WILHELM
(1646–1716). German rationalist and
defender of the view that the creation is
Free download pdf