Transcendence in Philosophy and ReligionJames E. Faulconer Indiana University Press, 2003 - 151 pages Can transcendence be both philosophical and religious? Do philosophers and theologians conceive of the same thing when they think and talk about transcendence? Philosophy and religion have understood transcendence and other matters of faith differently, but both the language and concepts of religion, including transcendence, reside at the core of postmodern philosophy. Transcendence in Philosophy and Religion considers whether it is possible to analyze religious transcendence in a philosophical manner, an. |
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Page 36
... reality that will also convince others . Or is it that , here in particular , faith and conviction on the one hand , and ratio on the other , have little impact on one another ? In the domain of faith , is it not , rather , that no one ...
... reality that will also convince others . Or is it that , here in particular , faith and conviction on the one hand , and ratio on the other , have little impact on one another ? In the domain of faith , is it not , rather , that no one ...
Page 40
... reality , through knowing timeless laws . Unlike hearsay and knowledge from authority , the knowledge of nature can be attained by anyone ; it is not esoteric or elitist . Thus , according to Spinoza , through the knowledge of nature ...
... reality , through knowing timeless laws . Unlike hearsay and knowledge from authority , the knowledge of nature can be attained by anyone ; it is not esoteric or elitist . Thus , according to Spinoza , through the knowledge of nature ...
Page 48
... reality and existence of God . A story becomes credible when it has a profound message for people . The philosophical approach to a story will ask questions about the reality of the story and , as a consequence , about what God actually ...
... reality and existence of God . A story becomes credible when it has a profound message for people . The philosophical approach to a story will ask questions about the reality of the story and , as a consequence , about what God actually ...
Contents
Whose Philosophy? Which Religion? Reflections on Reason as Faith | 13 |
Religion and the Possibility of Justice | 70 |
RETHINKING PHENOMENOLOGY FROM RELIGION | 85 |
Copyright | |
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already analysis appears argues beliefs biblical chiasmus Christian claim concept constituted context Council of Trent Courtine criticism critique Dasein debate determination disclosed disclosure divine dogma Dominique Janicaud donation embodied meanings essay Eucharist event Exodus experience fact faith Fordham University given given-to gives God's Hegel Heidegger Heidegger's hermeneutic circle holy human Husserl Husserlian icon idol idolatry incarnans insight intelligibility intentionality interpretation Israel Jean-Luc Marion Kant labor for justice life-world limits manifestation metanarrative metaphysical Michel Henry motive Moyaert natural theology object ontic onto-theology ontological ontological difference origin orthopraxy Paris Paul Ricoeur person phenome phenomenality phenomenology phenomenon philosophy point of departure possible present-at-hand pure radically rational reality reason reduced relation religion religious remains revelation Ricoeur saturated sense of symbols shows signifies story symbolic practice Theological Turn theology theoretical thing thought tion Trans transcendental transcendentology translation modified transsubstantiatio understanding understood University Press visible words