A Guide to the Phenomenology of Religion: Key Figures, Formative Influences and Subsequent DebatesBloomsbury Publishing, 15. juuni 2006 - 276 pages The phenomenological method in the study of religions has provided the linchpin supporting the argument that Religious Studies constitutes an academic discipline in its own right and thus that it is irreducible either to theology or to the social sciences. This book examines the figures whom the author regards as having been most influential in creating a phenomenology of religion. Background factors drawn from philosophy, theology and the social sciences are traced before examining the thinking of scholars within the Dutch, British and North American 'schools' of religious phenomenology. |
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Page 27
... manifestation . All objects in the world , for Plato , imitate their essential and pure form . Any particular chair , for example , participates in the ideal form of ' chairness ' . For Plato , the form is the real ; the particular ...
... manifestation . All objects in the world , for Plato , imitate their essential and pure form . Any particular chair , for example , participates in the ideal form of ' chairness ' . For Plato , the form is the real ; the particular ...
Page 30
... explain everything , including consciousness , in terms of physical manifestations . A chief culprit in this regard for Husserl was psychology because it reduced the mind to just another species. 30 A GUIDE TO THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF RELIGION.
... explain everything , including consciousness , in terms of physical manifestations . A chief culprit in this regard for Husserl was psychology because it reduced the mind to just another species. 30 A GUIDE TO THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF RELIGION.
Page 55
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Contents
1 | |
9 | |
35 | |
The Contributions of Troeltsch Weber and Jung to Phenomenological Thinking | 67 |
Chapter 4 The Decisive Role of Dutch Phenomenology in the New Science of Religion | 103 |
The British School of Phenomenology | 141 |
North American Phenomenology at Chicago and in the Thought of W C Smith | 171 |
Subsequent Debates in the Academic Study of Religions | 209 |
Bibliography | 249 |
Index | 263 |
Other editions - View all
A Guide to the Phenomenology of Religion: Key Figures, Formative Influences ... James Cox Limited preview - 2006 |
A Guide to the Phenomenology of Religion: Key Figures, Formative Influences ... James Cox Limited preview - 2006 |
A Guide to the Phenomenology of Religion: Key Figures, Formative Influences ... James Cox Limited preview - 2006 |
Common terms and phrases
academic study African religions agnosticism Albrecht Ritschl analysis approach argues belief Bleeker bracketing called Chantepie chapter Christian Comparative Religion concept consciousness contexts cultural debate defined Descartes described dimensions divine Dutch Eliade Eliade's epoché Ernst Troeltsch essence explains expressed faith Fitzgerald Geoffrey Parrinder Herrmann History of Religions Hogg human Husserl idea ideal types identified influence interpretation intuition Islam Jung Kant knowledge Leeuw manifestations McCutcheon meaning method methodology moral myths natural Ninian Smart object Oxford Parrinder particular perception perspective phenomenology of religion philosophical Platvoet reality refers Religion London Religions in Norway religious experience religious phenomena religious studies Ritschl Ritschlian ritual role sacred Schleiermacher scholar of religion science of religion scientific sense Smart Smith social sciences sociology spirit structure study of religions theologians theology theory Tiele Tjilpa tradition transcendent transcendental translated Troeltsch typologies understanding University Press Wach Walter Capps Weber Wiebe World Theology world views York