Results 181 to 190 of about 105,690 (218)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Related searches:

Personal identity, bodily continuity and resurrection

International Journal for Philosophy of Religion, 1978
L'article se refere a un article anterieur de G. I. Mavrodes, "The Life Everlasting and the Bodily Criterion of Identity", (Nous 11, 1977, 27-39) ou il est question dans une perspective chretienne de la resurrection du corps. Il repond a ceux qui prennent le corps comme critere de l'identite personnelle: le corps que j'avais il y a plusieurs annees est-
openaire   +1 more source

Bodily Resurrection in Catholic Perspectives

Theological Studies, 2000
A growing consensus understands bodily resurrection to mean that the personal identity established in an embodied history is raised up into a transphysical reality. Ongoing debate concerns the notion of a resurrection in death that would exclude an intermediate state in which separated souls await bodily resurrection on the last day.
openaire   +1 more source

Bodily Resurrection and the Dialectic of Spirit and Matter

Theological Studies, 2005
[Christian belief in bodily resurrection is implicitly challenged by contemporary natural science with its empirical evidence for the interdependence of mental and bodily functions and their effective cessation at the moment of death. The author argues that only a new philosophical understanding of the relation between spirit and matter in which ...
openaire   +1 more source

Raised a Spiritual Body: bodily resurrection according to Paul

New Blackfriars, 1985
The aim of this study is to understand what Paul means by his statement about the resurrection in I Corinthians 15:44: ‘It is sown a physical body, it is raised a spiritual body’. We must examine Paul’s use of the terms body (soma), physical (psychikon and psyche) and spiritual (pneumatikon and pneuma).
openaire   +1 more source

Disability, Animality, and Enslavement in Rabbinic Narratives of Bodily Restoration and Resurrection

Journal of Late Antiquity, 2015
In rabbinic midrash, the resurrected body is often imagined as a site of eschatological healing, where the reversal of disability signals God’s capacity to overcome the seemingly intractable realities of the present. While conventional ideas of disability reversal often figure healing as the curative power to restore an individual body to full function,
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy