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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > General > Philosophy of religion
What difference does a worldview make? These eclectic essays from
twenty scholars show how embodying a biblical Christian worldview
helps transform mere existence into fullness of life. Read them to
discover . . . How Genesis answers the four most important human
questions of pre-modern and post-modern times (W. Brouwer); Why the
concept "Christian worldview" fits the unique experience of reality
Christianity affords, despite recent criticisms of the term and
concept (R. Kurka); How worldview competition in the global South
differs from the West (D. Button); How Western civilization lost
its Christian mind and can find it again (M. E. Roberts); How well
the reasons celebrity scholar Bart Ehrman gives for his
"deconversion" stack up (E. Meadors); How higher education has
abandoned its own source by expelling "religion of the heart" (R.
Wenyika & W. Adrian); How an "engineering mindset" helps
evaluate worldviews and how a Christian worldview fares (D.
Halsmer); Christian Humanism as an exodus from the cultural
wasteland for today's youth (R. Williams); The worldview John
Grisham's fiction expresses (J. Han & M. Bagley); How
Intelligent Design strengthens its status as science by using the
concept of "design" in a new way (D. Leonard); In the spirit of
"The Screwtape Letters," a new epistle to Wormwood that praises
compartmentalized Christianity (D. K. Naugle); How an orphaned
Japanese girl experienced "the American dream," God's way (K.
Takeuchi); How words, grammar, and style embody one's worldview,
for good or ill (S. Robbins); What happens to preaching-and the
church-when emotional response to visual stimuli preempts thought
(W. Wilson II); . . . and much more. "That which God has created
and sin has divided Christ is reuniting . . ., and this includes
the divisions generated by our . . . compartmentalizations. Our
gracious, redeeming God is putting Humpty Dumpty back together
again For Christian scholars and teachers, this magnificent truth
is fraught with implications for us . . . personally and
professionally." - David K. Naugle, "Squashing Screwtape: Debunking
Dualism and Restoring Integrity in Christian Educational Thought
and Practice"
This handbook provides theological and philosophical resources that
demonstrate analytic theology's unique contribution to the task of
theology. Analytic theology is a recent movement at the nexus of
theology, biblical studies, and philosophy that marshals resources
from the analytic philosophical tradition for constructive
theological work. Paying attention to the Christian tradition, the
development of doctrine, and solid biblical studies, analytic
theology prizes clarity, brevity, and logical rigour in its
exposition of Christian teaching. Each contribution in this volume
offers an overview of specific doctrinal and dogmatic issues within
the Christian tradition and provides a constructive conceptual
model for making sense of the doctrine. Additionally, an extensive
bibliography serves as a valuable resource for researchers wishing
to address issues in theology from an analytic perspective.
The Suffering of the Impassible God provides a major
reconsideration of the notion of divine impassibility in patristic
thought. The question whether, in what sense, and under what
circumstances suffering may be ascribed to God runs as a golden
thread through such major controversies as Docetism,
Patripassianism, Arianism, and Nestorianism. It is commonly claimed
that in these debates patristic theology fell prey to the
assumption of Hellenistic philosophy about the impassibility of God
and departed from the allegedly biblical view, according to which
God is passible. As a result, patristic theology is presented as
claiming that only the human nature of Christ suffered, while the
divine nature remained unaffected. Paul L. Gavrilyuk argues that
this standard view misrepresents the tradition. In contrast, he
construes the development of patristic thought as a series of
dialectical turning points taken to safeguard the paradox of God's
voluntary suffering in the flesh. For the Fathers the attribute of
divine impassibility functioned in a restricted sense as an
apophatic qualifier of all divine emotions and as an indicator of
God's full and undiminished divinity. The Fathers at the same time
admitted qualified divine passibility of the Son of God within the
framework of the Incarnation. Gavrilyuk shows that the Docetic,
Arian, and Nestorian alternatives represent different attempts at
dissolving the paradox of the Incarnation. These three alternatives
are alike in that they start with the presupposition of God's
unrestricted impassibility: the Docetic view proposes to give up
the reality of Christ's human experiences; the Arian position
sacrifices Christ's undiminished divinity; while the Nestorian
alternative isolates the experiences and sufferings of Christ's
humanity from his Godhead. In contrast to these alternatives, the
mind of the Church succeeded in keeping God's transcendence and
undiminished divinity in tension with God's intimate involvement in
human suffering. It is precisely because God's divinity and
transcendence are never lost in suffering that the Incarnation
becomes a genuine act of divine compassion, capable of transforming
and healing the human condition.
The brilliant and ground-breaking mimetic theory of the
French-American theorist Rene Girard (1923-2015)has gained
wide-ranging recognition, yet its development has received less
attention. This volume presents the important
correspondence-conducted in French and as yet unpublished, let
alone translated into English-between Girard and his major
theological interlocutor Raymund Schwager SJ (1935-2004). It
presents the personal relationship between two great thinkers that
led to the development of a significant break-through in the
humanities. In particular it reveals the theological development of
Girard's thought in dialogue with Schwager, who was concerned to
assist Girard in areas where he had little expertise and had
encountered major criticism, such as the theological application of
sacrifice. These issues in particular had placed major barriers to
Girard's acceptance in theological circles. These letters reveal
how Girard, with Schwager's help, entered the mainstream of
theological debate.
The phrase "Without Authority" is Soren Kierkegaard's way of
designating his lack of clerical ordination and to raise the
complex and central human issue of authority in human culture.
Authors of the essays in IKC-18 demonstrate how Kierkegaard's
literary genius, religious passion, and intellectual penetration
handle with equal ease and acuity the lily of the field, the bird
of the air, the sacrament of holy communion, and the concepts of
martyr, witness, genius, prototype, and apostle to create a
singular and 'authoritative' contribution to both theology and
philosophy of religion.
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Radical Apophasis
(Hardcover)
Todd Ohara; Foreword by Cyril O'Regan
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R1,222
R1,020
Discovery Miles 10 200
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F.W.J. Schelling (1775-1854) stands alongside J.G. Fichte and
G.W.F. Hegel as one of the great philosophers of the German
idealist tradition. The Schelling Reader introduces students to
Schelling's philosophy by guiding them through the first ever
English-language anthology of his key texts-an anthology which
showcases the vast array of his interests and concerns
(metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of nature, ethics,
aesthetics, philosophy of religion and mythology, and political
philosophy). The reader includes the most important passages from
all of Schelling's major works as well as lesser-known yet
illuminating lectures and essays, revealing a philosopher
rigorously and boldly grappling with some of the most difficult
philosophical problems for over six decades, and constantly
modifying and correcting his earlier thought in light of new
insights. Schelling's evolving philosophies have often presented
formidable challenges to the teaching of his thought. For the first
time, The Schelling Reader arranges readings from his work
thematically, so as to bring to the fore the basic continuity in
his trajectory, as well as the varied ways he tackles perennial
problems. Each of the twelve chapters includes sustained readings
that span the whole of Schelling's career, along with explanatory
notes and an editorial introduction that introduces the main
themes, arguments, and questions at stake in the text. The Editors'
Introduction to the volume as a whole also provides important
details on the context of Schelling's life and work to help
students effectively engage with the material.
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On Diaspora
(Hardcover)
Daniel Colucciello Barber
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R923
R792
Discovery Miles 7 920
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This comprehensive, psychological, and naturalistic analysis of
prayer offers an alternative to William James's model of prayer,
represented in his work "The Varieties of Religious Experience,"
which links supplication to the divine or supernatural realm.
Through his examination of prayer, and its connection to faith,
Faber also analyzes religious faith psychologically and
anthropologically, concluding that subjective prayer is finally an
instance of homeopathic magical conduct. It ritualistically
conjures up, according to the author, a version of the first,
primal, biological situation, in which the dependent little one
cries out to a parental big one for physical and emotional
nourishment. Eventually, religion...and its expression of faith
through prayer, provides us with a magical protective presence that
is natural in its return to the primal, rather than supernatural,
as James argues, in its presence and existence.
The very instructional details of individual prayer, Faber
argues, are unconsciously designed to recreate the magical alliance
through which our existence on the planet commences and goes
forward. Over and over again, dozens of times each day, thousands
of times each year, the little one asks and the big one sees to it
that the little one receives. Such asking and receiving is the
central feature of a child's existence. As we internalize this
reality and seek to re-create it in our adult lives, religious
conviction and faith--as it comes through prayer--helps us to
achieve a sense of security and a psychic return to the parental
alliance. Faber's compelling arguments will challenge readers to
consider prayer and faith as a magical circle of religious belief
and to examine afresh the underlying nature of supplication.
Why is the philosopher Hegel returning as a potent force in
contemporary thinking? Why, after a long period when Hegel and his
dialectics of history have seemed less compelling than they were
for previous generations of philosophers, is study of Hegel again
becoming important? Fashionable contemporary theorists like Francis
Fukuyama and Slavoj Zizek, as well as radical theologians like
Thomas Altizer, have all recently been influenced by Hegel, the
philosopher whose philosophy now seems somehow perennial- or, to
borrow an idea from Nietzsche-eternally returning. Exploring this
revival via the notion of 'negation' in Hegelian thought, and
relating such negativity to sophisticated ideas about art and
artistic creation, Andrew W. Hass argues that the notion of
Hegelian negation moves us into an expansive territory where art,
religion and philosophy may all be radically conceived and broken
open into new forms of philosophical expression. The implications
of such a revived Hegelian philosophy are, the author argues, vast
and current. Hegel thereby becomes the philosopher par excellence
who can address vital issues in politics, economics, war and
violence, leading to a new form of globalised ethics. Hass makes a
bold and original contribution to religion, philosophy, art and the
history of ideas.
Protestant theology and culture are known for a reserved, at times
skeptical, attitude to the use of art and aesthetic forms of
expression in a religious context. In Transcendence and
Sensoriness, this attitude is analysed and discussed both
theoretically and through case studies considered in a broad
theological and philosophical framework of religious aesthetics.
Nordic scholars of theology, philosophy, art, music, and
architecture, discuss questions of transcendence, the human senses,
and the arts in order to challenge established perspectives within
the aesthetics of religion and theology.
Rory Fox challenges the traditional understanding that Thomas
Aquinas believed that God exists totally outside of time. His study
investigates the work of several mid-thirteenth-century writers,
including Albert the Great and Bonaventure as well as Aquinas,
examining their understanding of the topological and metrical
properties of time. Fox thus provides access to a wealth of
material on medieval concepts of time and eternity, while using the
conceptual tools of modern analytic philosophy to express his
conclusions.
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Naturalism and Religion
(Hardcover)
Rudolf Otto; Translated by J. Arthur Thomson, Margaret Thomson
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R1,381
R1,138
Discovery Miles 11 380
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Molinism, named after the sixteenth-century Spanish Jesuit Luis de
Molina, re-emerged in the 1970s after it was unwittingly assumed in
versions of Alvin Plantinga's Free Will Defense against the Logical
Argument from Evil. The Molinist notion of middle knowledge--and
especially its main objects, so-called counterfactuals of
(creaturely) freedom--have been the subject of vigorous debate in
analytical philosophy of religion ever since. Is middle knowledge
logically coherent? Is it a benefit or a liability overall for a
satisfying account of divine providence? The essays in this
collection examine the status, defensibility, and application of
Molinism. Friends and foes of Molinism are well represented, and
there are some lively exchanges between them. The collection
provides a snap-shot of the current state of the Molinism Wars,
along with some discussion of where we've been and where we might
go in the future. More battles surely lie ahead; the essays and
ideas in this collection are likely to have a major impact on
future directions. The essays are specially written by a line-up of
established and respected philosophers of religion, metaphysicians,
and logicians. There is a substantive Introduction and an extensive
Bibliography to assist both students and professionals.
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