Results 101 to 110 of about 9,248 (264)
Should We Be Trying So Hard to Be Postmodern? A Response to Drees, Haught, and Yeager
This paper explores the thesis that both modernism and postmodernism, as contemporary cultural phenomena, have been unable to come to terms with the issue of human rationality in any positive way.
doaj +2 more sources
Theology, Disability and the New Genetics: Why Science Needs the Church [PDF]
John M. Quillin
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Lawnmower Poetry and the Poetry of Lawnmowers
Critical Quarterly, EarlyView.
Francesca Gardner
wiley +1 more source
HOW DOES MENTAL TIME TRAVEL IN THE EUCHARIST AID PSYCHOSPIRITUAL GROWTH?
Abstract This paper innovatively connects the Eucharist, which is usually considered to be in the domain of theology, with the concept of personality‐growth—the idea that a person’s personality can get better—which is usually considered to be in the domain of experimental psychology.
Buki Fatona
wiley +1 more source
John Polkinghorne and the Task of Addressing a “Messy” World
As a physicist‐theologian, John Polkinghorne has done a great service for the community of scholars engaged in the theology‐and‐science dialogue as well as for a broader audience of interested persons. We examine Polkinghorne's theological method to see
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Religion/Technology, Not Theology/Science, as the Defining Dichotomy
Rustum Roy
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To Desire What Is Nothing: Simone Weil, Asceticism and Psychoanalysis
Critical Quarterly, EarlyView.
Georgie Newson
wiley +1 more source
Love at Arms’ Length: Reconciliationism and its Tentative Future
Abstract In a string of articles, over the years, Shawn Bawulski has propagated a palatable via media between full‐fledged apokatastasis and a traditionalist doctrine of hell. Though not original to Bawulski, reconciliationism, in the eyes of many, offers a more faithful and effective synthesis of varied Christian eschatological commitments.
Andrew Hronich
wiley +1 more source
On the Manifold Meanings of Aesthetic Experience: Lonergan and Chrétien on Art
Abstract I argue that Jean‐Louis Chrétien’s account of beauty and Bernard Lonergan’s account of art and aesthetic experience complement one another and, when taken together, offer an illuminating philosophical account of the ontological, ethical, intellectual, and transcendent aspects of art and aesthetic experience.
Gregory P. Floyd
wiley +1 more source
The theological-bureaucratic science fiction of Philip K. Dick and Carl Schmitt
Timothy D. Peters
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