After Plato's allegory of the cave, Nietzsche's parable of the Madman is probably the most famous in all of Western philosophy; indeed, the Madman's declaration "God is dead and we have killed him" has probably penetrated its consciousness at a far deeper level. Nietzsche asked an intellectual culture still living off the borrowed values of a Christianity it no longer professed: "How do we live in a world that has lost its central conceptual, moral, existential focus? What do we make of meaning now that we know God doesn't exist?"
Through two major works, Sources of the Self (1989) and A Secular Age (2007), Canadian philosopher Charles Taylor has argued that in the wake of Nietzsche the onslaught of scientism, rationalism, and secularism has thinned out the moral world we moderns inhabit. As a subtraction story secularism disenchants the world, emptying our sense of transcendence and pushing us into an "immanent frame" of living that's inevitably hollow and existentially impoverished. Other secular thinkers such as Luc Ferry and Ronald Dworkin have, in their own ways, joined Taylor in this judgment.
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