|
Showing 1 - 18 of
18 matches in All Departments
This book addresses the different forms that religious belief can
take. Two primary forms are discussed: propositional or doctrinal
belief, and belief in God. Religious belief in God, whose affective
content is trust in God, it is seen, opens for believers a
relationship to God defined by trust in God. The book addresses the
issue of the relation between belief and faith, the issue of what
Soren Kierkegaard called the subjectivity of faith, and the issue
of the relation between religious belief and religious experience.
After the introductory chapter the book continues with a chapter in
which features and forms of belief allowed by the general concept
of belief are presented. Several of these forms and features are
related to the features of religious belief examined in succeeding
chapters. The book's final chapter examines God-relationships in
the Christian tradition that de-emphasize belief and are not
defined by belief.
This book addresses several dimensions of religious revelation.
These include its occurrence in various religious traditions, its
different forms, its elaborations, how it has been understood by
Western theologians, and differing views of revelation's
ontological status. It has been remarked that revelation is most at
home in theistic traditions, and this book gives each of the three
Abrahamic traditions - Judaism, Christianity, and Islam - its own
chapter. Revelation, however, is not limited to theistic
traditions; forms found in Buddhism and nondevotional (nontheistic)
Hinduism are also explored. In the book's final chapter a
particularly significant form of religious revelation is identified
and examined: pervasive revelation. The theistic manifestation of
this form of revelation, pervasive in the sense that it may occurs
in all the domains or dimensions of human existence, is shown to be
richly represented in the Psalms, where God's presence may be found
in the heavens, in the growing of grass, and in one's daily going
out and coming in. Pervasive revelation of religious reality is
also shown to be present in the Buddhist tradition.
This book explores religious epiphanies in which there is the
appearance of God, a god or a goddess, or a manifestation of the
divine or religious reality as received in human experience.
Drawing upon the scriptures of various traditions, ancillary
religious writings, psychological and anthropological studies, as
well as reports of epiphanic experiences, the book presents and
examines epiphanies as they have occurred across global religious
traditions and cultures, historically and up to the present day.
Primarily providing a study of the great range of epiphanies in
their phenomenal presentation, Kellenberger also explores issues
that arise for epiphanies, such as the matter of their veridicality
(whether they are truly of or from the divine) and the question of
whether all epiphanies are of the same religious reality.
This book addresses the place of religious knowledge in religion,
particularly within Christianity. The book begins by examining the
difference between the general concepts of knowledge and belief,
the relation between faith and knowledge, and reasons why belief as
faith, and not knowledge, is central to the Abrahamic religions.The
book explores the ambivalence about religious knowledge within
Christianity. Some religious thinkers explicitly accepted and
sought religious knowledge, as did St. Thomas Aquinas, while
others, notably Soren Kierkegaard, cast knowledge and seeking it as
incompatible with faith. The book also examines two antithetical
religious intuitions about knowledge, both at home in the Christian
tradition. For one, faith requires a struggle with doubt. For the
other, faith requires a certainty that excludes doubt. For the
first, religious knowledge would destroy faith. For the second,
religious knowledge is compatible with faith and completes
it.Though the book focuses on the Christian tradition, it also
considers other traditions, including a chapter on the place of
religious knowledge in nontheistic religious traditions. The final
chapter examines how coming to Wisdom as personified in the Jewish
and Christian traditions may be distinct from attaining religious
knowledge.
This book is about religion, pacifism, and the nonviolence that
informs pacifism in its most coherent form. Pacifism is one
religious approach to war and violence. Another is embodied in just
war theories, and both pacifism and just war thinking are
critically examined. Although moral support for pacifism is
presented, a main focus of the book is on religious support for
pacifism, found in various religious traditions. A crucial
distinction for pacifism is that between force and violence.
Pacifism informed by nonviolence excludes violence, but, the book
argues, allows forms of force. Peacekeeping is an activity that on
the face of it seems compatible with pacifism, and several
different forms of peacekeeping are examined. The implications of
nonviolence for the treatment of nonhuman animals are also
examined. Two models for attaining the conditions required for a
world without war have been proposed. Both are treated and one, the
model of a biological human family, is developed. The book
concludes with reflections on the role of pacifism in each of five
possible futurescapes.
Using various and competing religious sensibilities, Introduction
to the Philosophy of Religion helps students work through the
traditional material and their own religious questions.
Religious thinkers in the Christian theistic tradition have tried
to resolve the problem of evil-how a wholly good and omnipotent God
could allow there to be evil-by offering a theodicy. This book
considers three traditional theodicies and the objections they have
elicited: Leibniz's best of all possible worlds theodicy, the free
will theodicy, and an Irenaean type of theodicy. It also considers
metatheodicies and limited theodicies. However, this book departs
from traditional religious thinking by presenting and treating
religious approaches to evil that do not confront evil through the
religious problem of evil. Primary among the three religious
approaches to evil that are presented is the approach of Job-like
belief. Such an approach embodies Job's acceptance of evil as what
God has given, expressed in his rhetorical "Shall we receive good
at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil?" (Job 2.10). The
various elements of Job-like belief that are internally required
for its approach to evil are critically examined, and it is seen
how a Job-like approach to evil neither seeks nor requires a
resolution to the problem of evil. The other two religious
approaches to evil, as opposed to the problem of evil, are the
effort to lessen evil in the world and the practice of forgiveness,
both of which are compatible with each other and with a Job-like
acceptance of evil, with which they can be combined. Also treated
in this book are mystery and God's goodness. Accompanying every
theodicy is mystery (in its religious sense as that which is beyond
human understanding), and the experience of the mystery of God's
goodness shining through the world and through evil is embodied in
Job-like belief.
Exploring the religious category of dying to self, this book aims
to resolve contemporary issues that relate to detachment. Beginning
with an examination of humility in its general notion and as a
religious virtue that detachment presupposes, Kellenberger draws on
a range of ancient, medieval, modern, and contemporary sources that
address the main characteristics of detachment, including the work
of Meister Eckhart, St. Teresa, and Simone Weil, as well as writers
as varied as Gregory of Nyssa, Rabi'a al-Adawiyya, SAren
Kierkegaard, Andrew Newberg, John Hick and Keiji Nishitani.
Kellenberger explores the key issues that arise for detachment,
including the place of the individual's will in detachment, the
relationship of detachment to desire, to attachment to persons, and
to self-love and self-respect, and issues of contemporary secular
detachment such as inducement via chemicals. This book heeds the
relevance of the religious virtue of detachment for those living in
the twenty-first century.
This book is an investigation of wisdom in its diverse nature and
types. Wisdom may be as everyday as folk adages or as arcane as a
religious parable. In one form it is highly practical, and in
another it addresses what is fundamentally real. In another form it
is moral wisdom, and when it is psychological wisdom it can inform
wise judgment. It can be philosophical, and it can be religious.
And in one form it is mystical wisdom. These types of wisdom are
essentially different, even when they overlap. Often wisdom is
proffered in wise sayings-such as proverbs, aphorisms, or
maxims-but one form, mystical wisdom, defies articulation. In this
book all these types of wisdom will be presented, drawing upon a
diversity of sources, and critically examined. Offered wisdom
carries in its train a number of issues, not the least of which is
how to distinguish between true wisdom and pseudo-wisdom.Also it
may be asked of wisdom, when it is true, whether it is true
relativistically, varying with culture, or true universally. Many
types of wisdom have their origin in antiquity, but can there be
new forms of wisdom? Does wisdom, as contemporary philosophers have
maintained, have an underlying universal nature? This book
addresses these issues and others.
Exploring the religious category of dying to self, this book aims
to resolve contemporary issues that relate to detachment. Beginning
with an examination of humility in its general notion and as a
religious virtue that detachment presupposes, Kellenberger draws on
a range of ancient, medieval, modern, and contemporary sources that
address the main characteristics of detachment, including the work
of Meister Eckhart, St. Teresa, and Simone Weil, as well as writers
as varied as Gregory of Nyssa, Rabi'a al-Adawiyya, SAren
Kierkegaard, Andrew Newberg, John Hick and Keiji Nishitani.
Kellenberger explores the key issues that arise for detachment,
including the place of the individual's will in detachment, the
relationship of detachment to desire, to attachment to persons, and
to self-love and self-respect, and issues of contemporary secular
detachment such as inducement via chemicals. This book heeds the
relevance of the religious virtue of detachment for those living in
the twenty-first century.
This book treats the presence of God and the presence of persons.
The experience of the presence of God is a well-recognized
religious experience in theistic traditions. The experience of the
presence of persons, this book argues, is an analogous moral
experience. As it is possible for individuals to come into the
presence of God - to have this phenomenal experience - so it is
possible for them to come into the presence of persons.
Kellenberger explores how coming into the presence of persons is
structurally analogous with coming into the presence of God.
Providing a highly focused analysis of the two seemingly distinct
concepts, normally thought to fall under different subfields of
philosophy, the chapters carefully draw paralells between them.
Kellenberger then goes on show how, analogous to "the death of
God," a loss of the consciousness of the reality of God and his
presence, is a "death of persons", felt as a loss of the sense of
the inherent worth of persons and their presence. This volume
finishes with an examination of the concrete moral and
religio-ethical implications of coming into the presence of
persons, and in particular the implications of coming into the
presence of all persons.
This book explores religious epiphanies in which there is the
appearance of God, a god or a goddess, or a manifestation of the
divine or religious reality as received in human experience.
Drawing upon the scriptures of various traditions, ancillary
religious writings, psychological and anthropological studies, as
well as reports of epiphanic experiences, the book presents and
examines epiphanies as they have occurred across global religious
traditions and cultures, historically and up to the present day.
Primarily providing a study of the great range of epiphanies in
their phenomenal presentation, Kellenberger also explores issues
that arise for epiphanies, such as the matter of their veridicality
(whether they are truly of or from the divine) and the question of
whether all epiphanies are of the same religious reality.
Using various and competing religious sensibilities, Introduction
to the Philosophy of Religion helps readers work through the
traditional material and their own religious questions. It
addresses the question "Does God exist?," while also engaging how
religions are lived and experienced in contemporary life. This book
includes chapters or sections on the religions of the world, with
sections on the history, belief, and practice of five world
religions; the relevance to faith of the arguments for the
existence of God; the realism issue; religious plurality; and the
gender issue For individuals interested in the study of philosophy
of religion.
This book is about religion, pacifism, and the nonviolence that
informs pacifism in its most coherent form. Pacifism is one
religious approach to war and violence. Another is embodied in just
war theories, and both pacifism and just war thinking are
critically examined. Although moral support for pacifism is
presented, a main focus of the book is on religious support for
pacifism, found in various religious traditions. A crucial
distinction for pacifism is that between force and violence.
Pacifism informed by nonviolence excludes violence, but, the book
argues, allows forms of force. Peacekeeping is an activity that on
the face of it seems compatible with pacifism, and several
different forms of peacekeeping are examined. The implications of
nonviolence for the treatment of nonhuman animals are also
examined. Two models for attaining the conditions required for a
world without war have been proposed. Both are treated and one, the
model of a biological human family, is developed. The book
concludes with reflections on the role of pacifism in each of five
possible futurescapes.
"One of the most interesting features of the book is Kellenberger's
attempt to show how standard notions such as rights, obligations,
and virtues are recast and defended from the point of view of
relationship morality. This is needed because, if he is right, the
existing moral absolutist accounts are unsatisfactory and the
challenge issued by moral relativism is unmet.... The audience for
the work extends far beyond moral philosophers. It will interest
political theorists, anthropologists, theologians, and
sociologists. It ranges across moral thought, religious reflection,
feminism, and ethnography. And because it is written plainly and is
rich with illustrations, it could be suitable as a text in advanced
undergraduate and graduate classes. It is also accessible to a
general audience, provided it is literate and is willing to think
hard about moral issues."
This book is an inquiry into the extent to which human
relationships are foundational in morality. J. Kellenberger seeks
to discover, first, how relationships between persons, and
ultimately the relationship that each person has to each person by
virtue of being a person, underlie the various traditional
components of morality--obligation, virtue, justice, rights, and
moral goods--and, second, how relationship morality is more fully
consonant with our moral experience than other forms of human
morality.
Kellenberger traces the implications of relationship morality
for an understanding of religious duty to God and for the status of
our obligations to animals. He also examines issues relating to a
feminist "ethics of caring." While this book is a work in ethics,
its approach is not limited to an examination of theories of
obligation, such as utilitarianism, nor is it limited to the
traditional areas covered by wider philosophical treatments of
ethics. It embraces these but examines such moral categories as
love, respect for persons, shame, and their place in morality.
|
You may like...
Workplace law
John Grogan
Paperback
R900
R820
Discovery Miles 8 200
|