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Karl Barth on Theology and Philosophy (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,617
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Karl Barth on Theology and Philosophy (Hardcover)
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Karl Barth is often assumed to have been hostile to philosophy,
wilfully ignorant of it, or too indebted to its conclusions for his
own theological good. These truisms of twentieth-century theology
are challenged in this original and comprehensive account of
Barth's understanding of the relationship between theology and
philosophy. Drawing upon a range of material from Barth's earliest
writings (1909) up until interviews and roundtable discussions that
took place shortly before his death (1968), Kenneth Oakes offers a
developmental account of Barth's thoughts on philosophy and
theology. Beginning with the nineteenth-century intellectual
background to Barth's earliest theology, Oakes presents the young
and 'liberal' Barth's understanding of the relationship between
theology and philosophy and then tracks this understanding
throughout the rest of Barth's career. While Barth never finally
settled on a single, fixed account of theology and philosophy,
there was still a great deal of continuity regarding this topic in
Barth's oeuvre. Looking through the lens of theology and philosophy
Barth's continual indebtedness to nineteenth-century modern
theology is clearly seen, as well as his attempts and struggles to
move beyond it. In addition to locating Barth's account of theology
and philosophy historically, this study also gives attention to the
specific doctrines and theological presuppositions that inform
Barth's different portrayals of the relationship between theology
and philosophy. Oakes asks how and why Barth used material from the
doctrines under consideration-such as revelation, theological
ethics, Christology- to talk about theology and philosophy. Barth
is shown to have been concerned not only with the integrity and
independence of theological discourse but also with the idea that
theology should not lose its necessary and salutary interactions
with philosophy. Finally, Oakes also considers the reception of
Barth's thought in some of the luminary figures of
twentieth-century philosophy, and identifies the three main
impressions philosophers have had of Barth's life and work.
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