|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Well-known scholars in the study of religions bring up to date and
elucidate the discussion on the three most debated approaches in
comparative religion, namely, the hermeneutical approach, the
explanatory or cognitivist approach, and the critical approach. The
approaches and methods of studying religion are disputed in an
outspoken and challenging way, critically and radically arguing
pros and cons. This work is unique, unrivalled, and full of
essential insights into the dialogue of today and of the challenges
of tomorrow.
Mount Athos has been exercising its magnetic attraction on monks
and pilgrims for over a thousand years. As the papers collected in
this volume show (many of them delivered at a conference convened
in Helsinki in 2006 to mark the opening of an exhibition of
treasures of Mount Athos), monks have been drawn to its forests,
cliffs, and caves in search of tranquillity and the inspiring
teaching of charismatic elders since the ninth century. Through the
Hesychastic renewal which began on Athos in the late Middle Ages
the Holy Mountain acquired unprecedented importance throughout the
Balkans, Eastern Europe, and Russia and rapidly extended its
spiritual influence from the Mediterranean to the White Sea. Many
of the papers are concerned with aspects of pilgrimage to Athos and
the effect that a visit to the Mountain has on pilgrims' lives.
Today the magnetism has lost none of its force and, despite threats
to its environment and its unique way of life, Athos continues to
operate as a spiritual powerhouse offering refreshment to all who
turn to it.
The challenge of methodic quality has haunted scholars in the human
and social sciences since the end of the nineteenth century with
the explosive and public success of the natural sciences and their
precision and aim of controlling nature. The discussion has been
dominated by the quest for proper scientific concepts and methods
comparable to those employed in the natural sciences. This book
discloses the limits of scientific concepts and methods, and the
failure of approaches in the human sciences emulating the
scientific procedures in the natural sciences, notably the
cognitive science of religion, to articulate religious life in its
actuality. The author demonstrates on the basis of his own field
research conducted among Buddhist monks in Sri Lanka and Orthodox
monks and pilgrims on the Holy Mountain of Athos in Greece how
preconceptions and historical belongingness determine
interpretation. He argues that in the human sciences words matter
more than concepts and propositions, and elucidates how words are
revelatory of the authenticity of being, when the attitude adopted
is that the view of the encountered other might be right. In the
conclusion the author identifies the methodic characteristics of
hermeneutic reflection and proposes an analytic model for the human
sciences that enables scholars to articulate the authenticity of
actual life in words that reach the other.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R192
Discovery Miles 1 920
|