Questioning GodJohn D. Caputo, Mark Dooley, Michael J. Scanlon Indiana University Press, 2001 - 379 psl. In 15 insightful essays, Jacques Derrida and an international group of scholars of religion explore postmodern thinking about God and consider the nature of forgiveness in relation to the paradoxes of the gift. Among the themes addressed by contributors are the possibilities of imagining God as unthinkable, imagining God as non-patriarchal, imagining a return to Augustine, and imagining an age in which praise is far more important than narrative. Questioning God moves readers beyond the parameters of metaphysical reason and modernist rationality as it attempts to think the questions of God and forgiveness in a postmodernist context. Contributors include John D. Caputo, Jacques Derrida, Mark Dooley, Francis Schüssler Fiorenza, Robert Gibbs, Jean Greisch, Kevin Hart, Richard Kearney, Cleo McNelly Kearns, John Milbank, Regina M. Schwartz, Michael J. Scanlon, and Graham Ward. Indiana Series in the Philosophy of Religion--Merold Westphal, general editor |
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... biblical resonance , even if that is not something that Derrida himself is conscious of or consciously monitors ? What Derrida has variously called a " hyperbolic ethics , " an ethics beyond or without ethics , the ethicity of ethics ...
... biblical narra- tives as constituting a people whom God jealously protects against their en- emies , which then become an instrument , a weapon , to justify the worst evils , Schwartz proposes hearing the great biblical stories as ...
... biblical one , including above all the conversation that transpires between God and his people . Poetry is a performance , an enactment not a description , and hence like a liturgy , which illuminates the action of a conversation by ...
Atsiprašome, šio puslapio turinio peržiūra yra ribojama.
Atsiprašome, šio puslapio turinio peržiūra yra ribojama.
Turinys
IV | 21 |
V | 52 |
VI | 73 |
VII | 92 |
VIII | 129 |
IX | 151 |
X | 153 |
XI | 186 |
XV | 230 |
XVI | 235 |
XVII | 263 |
XVIII | 274 |
XIX | 291 |
XX | 318 |
XXI | 341 |
XXII | 371 |