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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.
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.
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.
This book challenges the widespread assumption that the ethical
life and society must be moral in any objective sense. In his
previous works, Marks has rejected both the existence of such a
morality and the need to maintain verbal, attitudinal, practical,
and institutional remnants of belief in it. This book develops
these ideas further, with emphasis on constructing a positive
alternative. Calling it "desirism", Marks illustrates what life and
the world would be like if we lived in accordance with our rational
desires rather than the dictates of any actual or pretend morality,
neither overlaying our desires with moral sanction nor attempting
to override them with moral strictures. Hard Atheism and the Ethics
of Desire also argues that atheism thereby becomes more plausible
than the so-called New Atheism that attempts to give up God and yet
retain morality.
The first critical guide to the essential literature reflecting and
expressing psychoanalytic approaches to religion, this volume's
concentrates on critical assessments that steer the user toward
works of lasting value. The book's first priority is to include
publications clearly aimed at continuing the Freudian tradition and
contributing to the psychoanalytic study of religion. The book will
be of interest to scholars and students of psychology and religion
as well as the general reader who is seeking works on those topics.
Most of the psychoanalytic literature in English since 1920 is
included and is organized in 21 topical sections. Cross-references
and indexes increase the usefulness of the work. The author has
tried to include every coherent effort, guided by psychoanalytic
theory, to offer an explanation, understanding, or interpretation
of religion or religious behavior. The work will be of interest in
the fields of psychoanalysis, psychology, sociology, anthropology,
history, literature, folklore, and religion. Public libraries will
find this a valuable reference tool to offer the general reader who
is interested in a broad spectrum of ideas.
Religious beliefs are deeply connected to and expressive of
religious life. Yet mainstream philosophy of religion has primarily
focused on the truth and justification of religious beliefs. This
is the first collection to acknowledge the vital role practice
plays in shaping what we believe. Emerging and established voices
across different philosophical traditions come together to consider
public worship from perspectives such as trauma and social
ontology, sound and silence, knowledge and hope. They use of
liturgy as a lens to view embodied religious practice,
intrinsically connecting religious rituals to human existence and
cutting across the so-called 'analytic-continental' divide. Case
studies, taken from Christianity, offer analyses that address power
structures associated with modes of knowing. The purpose is not to
reject what has gone before but to expand the focus of philosophy
of religion. This approach lays the groundwork for investigations
into how beliefs are situated in our theological, moral, and social
frameworks. For any philosophy of religion student or scholar
interested in how thinking and living well are intimately related,
this is a go-to resource. It takes seriously the importance of
historical religious traditions and communities, opening the space
for cross-cultural and interdisciplinary debates.
Becoming god was an ideal of many ancient Greek philosophers, as
was the life of reason, which they equated with divinity. This book
argues that their rival accounts of this equation depended on their
divergent attitudes toward time. Affirming it, Heraclitus developed
a paradoxical style of reasoning--"chiasmus"--that was the activity
of his becoming god. Denying it as contradictory, Parmenides sought
to purify thinking of all contradiction, offering eternity to those
who would follow him. Plato did, fusing this pure style of
reasoning--consistency--with a Pythagorean program of purification
and divinization that would then influence philosophers from
Aristotle to Kant. Those interested in Greek philosophical and
religious thought will find fresh interpretations of its early
figures, as well as a lucid presentation of the first and most
influential attempts to link together divinity, rationality, and
selfhood.
This book examines the concept of Purgatory. However, in
contradistinction to the many monographs and edited volumes
published in the past 50 years devoted to historical, cultural, or
theological treatments of Purgatory-especially in proportion to the
voluminous output on Heaven and Hell-this collection features
papers by philosophers and other scholars engaged specifically in
philosophical argument, debate, and dialogue involving conceptions
of Purgatory and related ideas. It exists to broaden the discussion
beyond the prevailing trends in the academic literature and fills
an important intellectual gap.
Morality and religion: intimately wed, violently opposed, or
something else? Discussion of this issue appears in pop culture,
the academy, and the media_often generating radically opposed
views. At one end of the spectrum are those who think that unless
God exists, ethics is unfounded and the moral life is unmotivated.
At the other end are those who think that religious belief is
unnecessary for_and even a threat to_ethical knowledge and the
moral life. This volume provides an accessible, charitable
discussion that represents a range of views along this spectrum.
The book begins with a lively debate between Paul Kurtz and William
Lane Craig on the question, Is goodness without God good enough?
Kurtz defends the affirmative position and Craig the negative.
Following the debate are new essays by prominent scholars. These
essays comment on the debate and advance the broader discussion of
religion and morality. The book closes with final responses from
Kurtz and Craig.
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On Diaspora
(Hardcover)
Daniel Colucciello Barber
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R1,002
R852
Discovery Miles 8 520
Save R150 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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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.
This book presents the building blocks of Islamic economics as
meso-science, offering an in-depth study of the Qur'anic worldview
of the monotheistic unity of knowledge, which is the universal and
unique message of Tawhid in the Qur'an. This primal ontological
premise is formalised in an analytical approach that introduces and
unpacks the philosophical concepts of ontology, epistemology, and
phenomenology in relation to the Tawhidi methodological worldview.
The analysis of Qur'anic logical consistency is then cast in a
phenomenological perspective by applying the complete model of the
unity of knowledge of the Qur'an in a specific study of the Tawhidi
methodological approach to Islamic financial-economic theory. In
doing so, it tackles the problems of meso-economics given its
socio-scientific holism in world affairs. It hones in on the
results of the symbiotic modulation of evolutionary learning
processes in the world system of the unity of knowledge and its
material embedding across knowledge, and knowledge-induced space
and time dimensions. The author poses that Shari'ah is only partial
in its scope, and excludes an analytical methodological worldview.
Shari'ah is thus cast in the midst of a meso-socio-scientific
absence of any appertaining methodology. The book is a landmark
work in the conceptual and applied understanding of Tawhid as the
methodological worldview of the monotheistic unity of knowledge in
the meso-socio-scientific realm of 'everything', particularised to
Islamic economics. Adopting an inter-disciplinary view integrating
various fields, it challenges pervasive Western academic and
institutional thinking in terms of economics. It will be of
interest to students and researchers in Islamic economics,
religious theory, Islamic philosophy, development studies, and
finance.
This book is an interdisciplinary study of the cultural
representations of Jesus in the context of contemporary religious
theory and continental philosophy. It looks at Jesus in view of an
updated Derridean hauntology and spectrality, with an emphasis on
the inherent plasticity of the Christian heritage. While the work
engages with the recent Jesus-centered writings of Slavoj Zizek,
Francois Laruelle, and Giorgio Agamben, it places a greater and
much needed emphasis on the philosophical, theological, and
cultural links between a plastic, hauntological Christian heritage
and Jesus's historically evolving plural subjectivity, with the
latter explored in texts of popular culture. It is a
multidisciplinary study of Jesus, as well as a dynamic Christian
heritage that simultaneously constructs and deconstructs Jesus's
philosophical, political, and cultural centrality.
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Naturalism and Religion
(Hardcover)
Rudolf Otto; Translated by J. Arthur Thomson, Margaret Thomson
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R1,499
R1,229
Discovery Miles 12 290
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