Reason, Meaning and Experience
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Köp båda 2 för 990 kr"...the interdisciplinary series Transcending Boundaries in Philosophy and Theology is a welcome initiative... The editors provide a helpful introduction and two stimulating introductory essays, as well as supplying concise summaries of the ensuing chapters. Church Times ... the attempt to consider the relationship between philosophy and theology in a new way is to be commended: for this reason it deserves the kind of careful reading demanded by its contents."Theology
Kevin Vanhoozer is Research Professor of Systematic Theology at the Divinity School, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, USA. He is the author of Biblical Narrative in the Philosophy of Paul Ricoeur (CUP), Is There a Meaning in this Text?: The Bible, the Reader and the Morality of Literary Knowledge (Apollos), and First Theology: God, Scripture and Hermeneutics (Inter-Varsity Press). He is a former member of the Panel on Doctrine of the Church of Scotland and co-Chair of the Systematic Theology Group of the American Academy of Religion. Martin Warner is Associate Fellow of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Warwick. He is the author of Philosophical Finesse: Studies in the Art of Rational Persuasion (Clarendon Press), and A Philosophical Study of T. S. Eliot's Four Quartets (Mellen). He is a member of the Council of the Royal Institute of Philosophy.
Contents: Introduction; Transcending boundaries in philosophy and theology, Martin Warner; Once more into the borderlands: the way of wisdom in philosophy and theology after the 'turn to drama', Kevin J. Vanhoozer. Section One: Reason, Rationality and Traditions of Rationality: What is secularity?, Charles Taylor; Rational religious faith and Kant's transcendental boundaries, Chris L. Firestone; Boundaries crossed and uncrossable: physical science, social science, theology, Philip Clayton; The logos, the body and the world: on the phenomenological border, Graham Ward. Section Two: Meaning, Language and Interpretation: The question of God today, Nicholas Lash; Felicity and fusion: speech act theory and hermeneutical philosophy, Dan R. Stiver. Section Three: Experience, Imagination and Mysticism: Experience skewed, David Brown; On philosophers (not) reading history: narrative and utopia, Grace M. Jantzen; What to say: reflections on mysticism after modernity, George Pattison. Bibliography; Index.