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Apophatic Panentheism: Catherine Keller’s Constructive Theology
Neue Zeitschrift für Systematische Theologie und Religionsphilosophie, 2018SummaryCatherine Keller’s constructive theology includes an original and very interesting combination of process theology, feminist theology and negative theology. This combination culminates in the articulation of an “apophatic panentheism” that is urgent for its accentuation of connectivity and interdependency in our global world.
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Apophatic Theology and Its Vicissitudes
2019This chapter explores Derrida’s work in relation to apophatic theology, examining the ways in which the Dionysian inheritance is transformed in his writings so as to repeat differently the four themes of freedom, materiality, hierarchy, and universalism according to a new configuration of eros and ontology.
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Apophatic Theology’s Cataphatic Dependencies
The Thomist: A Speculative Quarterly Review, 1998L'article est consacre au probleme de la connaissance de Dieu et aux problemes poses par les theologies apophatiques et cataphatiques sur la nature de Dieu. L'A. cherche a resoudre ces problemes, en utilisant la doctrine de Saint Thomas d'Aquin comme tremplin.
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2019
Abstract One ancient reaction to the difficulties of identifying and describing God is to say that we cannot know what God is, we can only say what he is not. But does that leave any room at all for belief in God? One classic response is to say that we can apply terms to God only in some analogical sense.
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Abstract One ancient reaction to the difficulties of identifying and describing God is to say that we cannot know what God is, we can only say what he is not. But does that leave any room at all for belief in God? One classic response is to say that we can apply terms to God only in some analogical sense.
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Apophatic and Cataphatic Theology
2012The terminology of “apophatic” and “cataphatic” theologies, that is, the use of negation ( apophasis ) and affirmation ( kataphasis ) in our ways of talking about God, was introduced into Christian theology by the probably early-sixth-century author who wrote under the pseudonym of the Apostle Paul’s convert, Dionysius the Areopagite (generally ...
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Apophatic Theology and Twentieth-Century Novels
Religion and the Arts, 2018Abstract Drawing on apophatic theology, this essay argues that some twentieth-century texts invite an apophatic approach by revealing the limits of language and hinting at some understanding of God, without doing so directly. First, Leif Enger’s Peace Like a River shows a divine encounter but, in the process, underscores the limits of language to ...
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