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Being Religious (Hardcover)
Mladen Turk; Foreword by Philip Hefner
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R918
R832
Discovery Miles 8 320
Save R86 (9%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Our Bodies Are Selves (Hardcover)
Philip Hefner, Ann Milliken Pederson, Susan Barreto
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R1,121
R906
Discovery Miles 9 060
Save R215 (19%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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What does it mean to be human in an age of science, technology, and
faith? The ability to ask such a question suggests at least a
partial answer, in that however we describe ourselves we bear a
major role in determining what we will become. In this book, Philip
Hefner reminds us that this inescapable condition is the challenge
and opportunity of Homo sapiens as the created co-creator. In four
original chapters and an epilogue, Hefner frames the created
co-creator as a memoirist with an ambiguous legacy, explores some
of the roots of this ambiguity, emphasizes the importance of
answering this ambiguity with symbols that can interpret it in
wholesome ways, proposes a partial theological framework for
co-creating such symbols, and applies this framework to the
challenge of using technology like artificial intelligence and
robotics to create other co-creators in our own image. Editors
Jason P. Roberts and Mladen Turk have compiled eight responses to
Hefner's work to honor his scholarly career and answer his call to
help co-create a more wholesome future in an age of science,
technology, and faith.
Our Bodies Are Selves is a look at what it means to be human in a
world where medical technology and emerging ethical insight force
us to rethink the boundaries of humanity/spirit and man/machine.
This book gives us a fresh look at how our expanding biological
views of ourselves and our shared evolutionary history shows us a
picture that may not always illumine who and where we are as
Christians. Offering up Christian theological views of embodiment,
the authors give everyday examples of lives of love, faith, and
bodily realities that offer the potential to create new definitions
of what it means to be a faith community in an increasingly
technological age of medicine.
Joan D. Koss-Chioino and Philip Hefner's new volume is unique in
exploring the meaning of spiritual transformation and healing with
new research from a scientific perspective. An interdisciplinary
group of contributors-anthropological, psychological, medical,
theological, and biological scientists-investigate the role of
religious communities and healing practitioners, with spiritual
transformation as their medium of healing. Individual authors
evaluate the meaning of spiritual transformations and the
consequences for those who experience it; the contributions of
indigenous healing systems; new frameworks for neurological and
physiological correlates of transformative religious experiences;
the support from neuroscience for the radical empathy and
intersubjective exchange that takes place in healing practices; and
evidence for universal elements of the healing process. This
exciting new book will be an invaluable resource for those
generally interested in the role of religion in society, across the
sciences, social sciences, and all religious traditions. With a
foreword by Solomon H. Katz.
Joan D. Koss-Chioino and Philip Hefner's new volume is unique in
exploring the meaning of spiritual transformation and healing with
new research from a scientific perspective. An interdisciplinary
group of contributors-anthropological, psychological, medical,
theological, and biological scientists-investigate the role of
religious communities and healing practitioners, with spiritual
transformation as their medium of healing. Individual authors
evaluate the meaning of spiritual transformations and the
consequences for those who experience it; the contributions of
indigenous healing systems; new frameworks for neurological and
physiological correlates of transformative religious experiences;
the support from neuroscience for the radical empathy and
intersubjective exchange that takes place in healing practices; and
evidence for universal elements of the healing process. This
exciting new book will be an invaluable resource for those
generally interested in the role of religion in society, across the
sciences, social sciences, and all religious traditions. With a
foreword by Solomon H. Katz.
About the Contributor(s): Mladen Turk is Associate Professor of
Religious Studies at Elmhurst College. He is the author of Logic:
Exercises and Solutions (1995) in Croatian and contributor to
several scholarly and reference works in English and Croatian in
the area of history and theory of the study of religion and
religion and science.
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Three Essays (Paperback)
Albrecht Ritschl; Translated by Philip Hefner
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R866
R721
Discovery Miles 7 210
Save R145 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This collection of essays by various scientists, theologians,
philosophers and other academics explores the important dialogue
between science and religion. The editors emphasize the importance
of three main convergences: different sciences converging to give a
coherent story of humankind's place in the cosmos, different
religions converging to gain mutual understanding and harmony, and
both science and religion converging as people realize their
explanations and roles needn't be mutually exclusive. Contributors
address ideas on the evolution of matter, life and mind; the
evolution of language and brain; consciousness and creativity;
religion as a moral framework; science and the Qur'an; and religion
and enviromental ethics. This study is the sequel to "Cosmic
Beginnings and Human Ends".
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