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This is the first full-length detailed survey and critique of
modern Jerome scholarship, covering the crucial period 1880-2014.
At one level, the author ably argues that, despite Jerome's faults,
his work holds many important insights into the Early Church's
formation of Christian identity and Christian orthodoxy. On another
level, by examining aspects of Jerome's writing through the lens of
modern scholarship, the study also illumines the changing
directions and perspectives of Jerome studies. As such, it is a
valuable and unique account of the scholarly representation of
Jerome's oeuvre. Christopher Knight's work will continue to have a
respected place amongst Jerome studies for years to come. Content
1. Introduction 2. Jerome and Biblical Interpretation in the Early
Church 3. Early Modern Jerome Scholarship: 1880-1965 4. Later
Modern Jerome Scholarship: 1966-2012 5. Present Jerome Scholarship:
2013-2015 6. The Future of Jerome Studies 7. Conclusion
Emotions remain largely invisible in the management of criminal
justice practice. This book seeks to uncover some of the
underground emotional work of practitioners and make visible the
impact of both positive and negative emotions, which play a crucial
role in practitioner-offender relationships. Exploring how
practitioners understand, regulate and work with emotion, Knight
argues that the 'soft skills' of emotion are more likely to achieve
motivation and change in offenders than the 'hard' skills of
punishment, monitoring and surveillance. The book examines some of
the gendered implications of this practice and develops an argument
for the explicit building of emotional resources within
organizations to sustain the development, enhancement and support
of emotional literacy in the workforce. Using practice examples,
Knight reveals how practitioners can benefit from having an
understanding of their own emotions and how these can impact on
their practice. This unique and accessible book will be a valuable
resource to practitioners across the criminal justice sector
including probation officers, youth justice workers, police and
prison officers, social workers, policymakers and managers, as well
as scholars working within criminology, criminal justice and
probation.
From the sixteenth to early-nineteenth century, four times more
Africans than Europeans crossed the Atlantic Ocean to the Americas.
While this forced migration stripped slaves of their liberty, it
failed to destroy many of their cultural practices, which came with
Africans to the New World. In Working the Diaspora, Frederick
Knight examines work cultures on both sides of the Atlantic, from
West and West Central Africa to British North America and the
Caribbean.
Knight demonstrates that the knowledge that Africans carried
across the Atlantic shaped Anglo-American agricultural development
and made particularly important contributions to cotton, indigo,
tobacco, and staple food cultivation. The book also compellingly
argues that the work experience of slaves shaped their views of the
natural world. Broad in scope, clearly written, and at the center
of current scholarly debates, Working the Diaspora challenges
readers to alter their conceptual frameworks about Africans by
looking at them as workers who, through the course of the Atlantic
slave trade and plantation labor, shaped the development of the
Americas in significant ways.
Humans are unique in their ability to reflect on themselves.
Recently a number of scholars have pointed out that human
self-conceptions have a history. Ideas of human nature in the West
have always been shaped by the interplay of philosophy, theology,
science, and technology. The fast pace of developments in the
latter two spheres (neuroscience, genetics, artificial
intelligence, biomedical engineering) call for fresh reflections on
what it means, now, to be human, and for theological and ethical
judgments on how we might shape our own destiny in the future. The
leading scholars in this book offer fresh contributions to the
lively quest for an account of ourselves that does justice to
current developments in theology, science, technology, and
philosophy.
This book presents a celebration, survey and critique of the
theological work of arguably the most important and most
widely-read contributor to the modern dialogue between science and
theology: John Polkinghorne. Including a major survey by
Polkinghorne himself of his life's work in theology, this book
draws together contributors from among the most important voices in
the science-theology dialogue today to focus on key aspects of
Polkinghorne's work, with Polkinghorne providing responses. Anybody
exploring contemporary aspects of the science-religion debate will
find this book invaluable.
This book presents a celebration, survey and critique of the
theological work of arguably the most important and most
widely-read contributor to the modern dialogue between science and
theology: John Polkinghorne. Including a major survey by
Polkinghorne himself of his life's work in theology, this book
draws together contributors from among the most important voices in
the science-theology dialogue today to focus on key aspects of
Polkinghorne's work, with Polkinghorne providing responses. Anybody
exploring contemporary aspects of the science-religion debate will
find this book invaluable.
This Element examines the science-theology dialogue from the
perspective of Eastern Orthodox Christianity and provides a
critique of this dialogue based on six fundamental aspects of that
theology: (i) Its understanding of how philosophy may authentically
be used in the theological task; (ii) Its understanding of the use
and limitations of scientific and theological languages; (iii) Its
understanding of the role of humanity in bringing God's purposes to
fulfilment; (iv) its sense that material entities should be
understood less in materialist terms than in relation to the mind
of God; (v) Its Christological focus in understanding the concept
of creation; (vi) Its sense that the empirical world can be
understood theologically only when the 'world to come' is taken
fully into account. It is argued that Orthodoxy either provides an
alternative pan-Christian vision to the currently predominant one
or, at the very least, provides important new conceptual insights.
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