Theology and Difference: The Wound of Reason"... provocative and rewarding... " --Religious Studies Review "... a tour de force." --Theological Studies Theology and Difference reconceives the options confronting modern theology and investigates the disputed questions that underlie it. Pressing beyond the ready-made enlightenment offered by the subject-object framework, Walter Lowe uncovers a number of remarkable convergences between the contemporary philosopher Jacques Derrida and the early twentieth-century theologian Karl Barth. |
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Page 80
... divine and the human . More , the Ideas suggest that they themselves are the univocal relation between the divine and the human . Further still , the way of think- ing Loemker describes establishes a direct connection between ontotheo ...
... divine and the human . More , the Ideas suggest that they themselves are the univocal relation between the divine and the human . Further still , the way of think- ing Loemker describes establishes a direct connection between ontotheo ...
Page 92
... divine reality is precluded at the outset . Yet ( 2 ) solely within the finite realm , the opera- tion of the principle can amount to a sort of reflection of the truly infinite , a sort of " witness of that power which cannot be ...
... divine reality is precluded at the outset . Yet ( 2 ) solely within the finite realm , the opera- tion of the principle can amount to a sort of reflection of the truly infinite , a sort of " witness of that power which cannot be ...
Page 100
... divine . It is a line of reason- ing which is very compelling , very attractive , and , once the initial premise has been given , very natural as well . It has inspired much of Romanticism in the various arts , quite apart from its ...
... divine . It is a line of reason- ing which is very compelling , very attractive , and , once the initial premise has been given , very natural as well . It has inspired much of Romanticism in the various arts , quite apart from its ...
Contents
Barths Epistle to the Romans | 33 |
III | 48 |
Kant and the Sublation of Theodicy | 76 |
Copyright | |
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Adorno affirm ambiguity argue argument Barth becomes begin Bultmann century Chain chapter Christian common concept contextualization contrast critical crucial deconstruction Derridean Descartes dialectic différance distinction divine dualism effect effort equiprimordiality essay ethical existence existentialism existentialist experience fact finite finitude Frankfurt School Freud gesture Hegel Heidegger Heidegger's hermeneutic human Husserl Husserlian Ibid ideal idealist diamond imperative infinite intuition issue Jacques Derrida Jürgen Moltmann Kant Kantian Karl Barth Kierkegaard language logic matter means memory of suffering metaphysics Metz Minima Moralia modern nature notion object ontotheology opposition Paul Ricoeur phenomenology philosophy Pope position possible postmodern Practical Reason precisely presence problem proceeds psychoanalysis question radical rational rationalist ready-made enlightenment reality reflection regard Religion requires Ricoeur second Critique sense simply sort speak suggest suspicion Taylor telos theodicy theology things thinking thought tion tradition trans transcendence transcendental truth typology understanding University Press writing York