Hansen, Guillermo2019-09-252019-09-252009-08-0720099782940428007http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/173579"The globalising and unsettling forces of capitalism, technology, climate changes, mass media and popular culture, chart a reality marked by fleetness, disorientation and rapid social change. Millions of people have reacted by identifying themselves with religious fundamentalist views. While this phenomenon cannot be reduced to a single factor, it nonetheless signals a state of distress suffered by those marginalised by the global economy, many of whom also feel culturally threatened by the “materialist” and “secular” values of late modernity. [...].", p.173.Pages: 173-206engCreative Commons Copyright (CC 2.5)fundamentalismglobalizationCapitalismdemocracyPolitical ethicsReligious ethicsEthics of political systemsSpirituality and ethicsTolerance, Democracy and Fundamentalism(s) : Challenges in Time of Systemic BifurcationsBook chapter