Narrow Search
Last searches

Results for *

Displaying results 1 to 2 of 2.

  1. Multiple reformations?
    the many faces and legacies of the Reformation
    Contributor: Stievermann, Jan (HerausgeberIn); Zachman, Randall C. (HerausgeberIn)
    Published: [2018]; © 2018
    Publisher:  Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen

    Dieser Band untersucht den inhärenten Pluralismus der Reformation und ihre mannigfaltigen Kulturwirkungen aus ökumenischem und interdisziplinärem Blickwinkel. Die Aufsätze beleuchten u.a. folgende Schlüsselfragen: Wie können wir heute die Reformation... more

    Access:
    Aggregator (lizenzpflichtig)
    Resolving-System (lizenzpflichtig)
    Aggregator (lizenzpflichtig)
    Aggregator (lizenzpflichtig)
    Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Bremen
    No inter-library loan
    Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Bremen
    No inter-library loan
    Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Sachsen-Anhalt / Zentrale
    No inter-library loan
    Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Sachsen-Anhalt / Zentrale
    No inter-library loan
    HeiBIB - Die Heidelberger Universitätsbibliographie
    No inter-library loan
    Universität des Saarlandes, Fachrichtung Katholische Theologie, Bibliothek
    No inter-library loan
    Universitätsbibliothek der Eberhard Karls Universität
    No loan of volumes, only paper copies will be sent
    Universitätsbibliothek Vechta
    No inter-library loan

     

    Dieser Band untersucht den inhärenten Pluralismus der Reformation und ihre mannigfaltigen Kulturwirkungen aus ökumenischem und interdisziplinärem Blickwinkel. Die Aufsätze beleuchten u.a. folgende Schlüsselfragen: Wie können wir heute die Reformation als ein historisches und theologisches Ereignis interpretieren und bewerten, wie als historiographische Kategorie und kulturellen Mythos? Und was sind die langfristigen globalen Konsequenzen der Reformationsepoche, wie sie sich in Gestalt miteinander konkurrierender konfessioneller Kulturen und letztlich unterschiedlicher globaler Christentümer manifestierten, im Kontext derer unterschiedliche Formen der Moderne entstanden?InhaltsübersichtJan Stievermann/Randall Zachman: Preface The Many Faces of the Reformation Euan Cameron: Reconsidering Early-Reformation and Catholic-Reform Impulses – Randall C. Zachman: The Birth of Protestantism? Or the Reemergence of the Catholic Church? How Its Participants Understood the Evangelical Reformation Interpretations of Scripture in the Reformation Period Manfred Oeming: The Importance of the Old Testament for the Reformer Martin Luther – Greta Grace Kroeker: Erasmus and Scripture – Paul Silas Peterson: »The Text of the Bible is Stronger«: The Rebirth of Scriptural Authority in the Reformation and it Significance The Reformation as an Interpretative Event Emidio Campi: The Myth of the Reformation – Scott Dixon: The German Reformation as a Historiographical Construct: The Shaping of the Narrative from Melanchthon to Walch – Ute Lotz-Heumann: Confessionalization is Dead, Long Live the Reformation? Reflections on Historiographical Paradigm Shifts on the Occasion of the 500th Anniversary of the Protestant Reformation The Aftermath of the Reformation Period John O'Malley: Catholic Pastoral Care: The Early Modern Period – Jan Stievermann: Early American Protestantism and the Confessionalization Paradigm: A Critical Inquiry Confessional Empires, Missions, and Nations Simon Ditchfield: The »Making« of Roman Catholicism as a »World Religion« – Patrick Griffin: The Last War of Religion or the First War for Empire? Reconsidering the Meaning of The Seven Years' War in America – Hartmut Lehmann: Nationalism as Poison in the Veins of Western Christianity, c. 1800 – c. 1950 Confessional Modernities, Enlightenment and Secularization John Betz: J. G. Hammann as a Radical Reformer: Two Mites Toward a Post-Secular, Ecumenical Theology – Volker Leppin: Friedrich Gogarten's Theology of Secularization Confessional Cultures: Legal and Diaconical Traditions Christoph Strohm: Confession and Law in Early Modern Europe – Johannes Eurich: The Influence of Religious Traditions on Social Welfare Development: Observations from the Perspective of Comparative Welfare State Research Scripture and the Evangelical-Pietist Tradition Ryan P. Hoselton: »Flesh and Blood Hath Not Revealed It«: Reformation Exegetical Legacies in Pietism and Early Evangelicalism – Douglas A. Sweeney: The Still-Enchanted World of Jonathan Edwards' Exegesis and the Paradox of Modern Evangelical Supernaturalism Scriptural Authority and Biblical Scholarship in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Friederike Nüssel: The Value of the Bible: Martin Kähler's Theology of Scripture and its Ecumenical Impact – David Lincicum: Ferdinand Christian Baur, the New Testament, and the Principle of Protestantism – Matthias Konradt: Sola Scriptura and Historical-Critical Exegesis This volume explores the inherent pluralism of the Reformation and its manifold legacies from an ecumenical and interdisciplinary point of view. The essays shed new light on several key questions: How do we interpret and assess the Reformation as a historical and theological event, as a historiographic category, and as a cultural myth? What are the long-term global consequences of the Reformation period as manifest in the rise of competing confessional cultures and distinct Christian world religions, producing different types of modernities? How did these confessional cultures interact with the development of empires and nation-states, with the emergence of the sciences, as well as with divergent legal cultures and traditions in education and social welfare? What kind of modalities emerged in these confessional cultures for engaging with the humanistic study of the Bible and, later on, Higher Criticism?Survey of contentsJan Stievermann/Randall Zachman: Preface The Many Faces of the Reformation Euan Cameron: Reconsidering Early-Reformation and Catholic-Reform Impulses – Randall C. Zachman: The Birth of Protestantism? Or the Reemergence of the Catholic Church? How Its Participants Understood the Evangelical Reformation Interpretations of Scripture in the Reformation Period Manfred Oeming: The Importance of the Old Testament for the Reformer Martin Luther – Greta Grace Kroeker: Erasmus and Scripture – Paul Silas Peterson: »The Text of the Bible is Stronger«: The Rebirth of Scriptural Authority in the Reformation and it Significance The Reformation as an Interpretative Event Emidio Campi: The Myth of the Reformation – Scott Dixon: The German Reformation as a Historiographical Construct: The Shaping of the Narrative from Melanchthon to Walch – Ute Lotz-Heumann: Confessionalization is Dead, Long Live the Reformation? Reflections on Historiographical Paradigm Shifts on the Occasion of the 500th Anniversary of the Protestant Reformation The Aftermath of the Reformation Period John O'Malley: Catholic Pastoral Care: The Early Modern Period – Jan Stievermann: Early American Protestantism and the Confessionalization Paradigm: A Critical Inquiry Confessional Empires, Missions, and Nations Simon Ditchfield: The »Making« of Roman Catholicism as a »World Religion« – Patrick Griffin: The Last War of Religion or the First War for Empire? Reconsidering the Meaning of The Seven Years' War in America – Hartmut Lehmann: Nationalism as Poison in the Veins of Western Christianity, c. 1800 – c. 1950 Confessional Modernities, Enlightenment and Secularization John Betz: J. G. Hammann as a Radical Reformer: Two Mites Toward a Post-Secular, Ecumenical Theology – Volker Leppin: Friedrich Gogarten's Theology of Secularization Confessional Cultures: Legal and Diaconical Traditions Christoph Strohm: Confession and Law in Early Modern Europe – Johannes Eurich: The Influence of Religious Traditions on Social Welfare Development: Observations from the Perspective of Comparative Welfare State Research Scripture and the Evangelical-Pietist Tradition Ryan P. Hoselton: »Flesh and Blood Hath Not Revealed It«: Reformation Exegetical Legacies in Pietism and Early Evangelicalism – Douglas A. Sweeney: The Still-Enchanted World of Jonathan Edwards' Exegesis and the Paradox of Modern Evangelical Supernaturalism Scriptural Authority and Biblical Scholarship in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Friederike Nüssel: The Value of the Bible: Martin Kähler's Theology of Scripture and its Ecumenical Impact – David Lincicum: Ferdinand Christian Baur, the New Testament, and the Principle of Protestantism – Matthias Konradt: Sola Scriptura and Historical-Critical Exegesis

     

    Export to reference management software   RIS file
      BibTeX file
    Content information
    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Stievermann, Jan (HerausgeberIn); Zachman, Randall C. (HerausgeberIn)
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9783161565663
    Other identifier:
    9783161565663
    RVK Categories: BP 2020
    Edition: 1. Auflage
    Series: Colloquia historica et theologica ; 4
    Subjects: Colloquia historica et theologica; History of Lutheranism; Buddhism; Asian traditions; Hochschulkooperation; NS-Täter; Rechtsgleichheit; Religionshermeneutik; Kulturhermeneutik; Pflichtangebot; kalte Übernahme; Osiander, Andreas; Orientalische Kulte; Colloquia historica et theologica; Confessionalization; Confessionalization; modernity; History of biblical interpretation; modernity; History of biblical interpretation; Kirchengeschichte
    Scope: Online-Ressource, XV, 402 Seiten
    Notes:

    The essays in this volume grew from select contributions presented at the colloquies in Rome, Heidelberg, and Notre Dame between 2016 and 2017. (Introduction)

    Lizenzpflichtig

    Gesehen am 10.01.2019

  2. Self or No-Self?
    The Debate about Selflessness and the Sense of Self. Claremont Studies in the Philosophy of Religion, Conference 2015
    Contributor: Dalferth, Ingolf U. (HerausgeberIn); Kimball, Trevor W. (HerausgeberIn)
    Published: 2018
    Publisher:  Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen

    Religiöse, philosophische und theologische Perspektiven auf das Selbst variieren. Für manche ist das Selbst das Zentrum menschlichen Person, der ultimative Träger der eigenen Identität und das innerste Geheimnis der menschlichen Existenz. Für andere... more

    Access:
    Resolving-System (lizenzpflichtig)
    Aggregator (lizenzpflichtig)
    Aggregator (lizenzpflichtig)
    Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Bremen
    No inter-library loan
    Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Sachsen-Anhalt / Zentrale
    No inter-library loan
    Universitätsbibliothek der Eberhard Karls Universität
    No loan of volumes, only paper copies will be sent

     

    Religiöse, philosophische und theologische Perspektiven auf das Selbst variieren. Für manche ist das Selbst das Zentrum menschlichen Person, der ultimative Träger der eigenen Identität und das innerste Geheimnis der menschlichen Existenz. Für andere ist das Selbst ein grammatikalischer Fehler und die Rede vom Selbst eine existentielle und erkenntnistheoretische Täuschung. In der westlichen Psychologie, Philosophie und Theologie wird der Begriff 'Selbst' oft als ein Substantiv verwendet, welches sich nicht auf die Ausübung eine Tätigkeit oder auf einen materiellen Körper per se bezieht, sondern eher auf einen (gegenderten) Organismus, der etwas über seine Materialität hinausgehendes repräsentiert. Dieser Sammelband dokumentiert eine kritische und konstruktive Debatte zwischen Kritikern und Verfechtern des Selbst oder des Nicht-Selbst, die die interkulturellen Dimensionen dieses wichtigen Themas erforscht.InhaltsübersichtPreface Ingolf U. Dalferth: Introduction: The Debate about Self and Selflessness I. The Making of the Self through Language Ingolf U. Dalferth: Situated Selves in »Webs of Interlocution«: What Can We Learn from Grammar? – Marlene Block: God, Grammar and the Truing of the Self: A Response to Ingolf Dalferth II. The European Legacy Joseph S. O'Leary: The Self and the One in Plotinus – Marcelo Souza: A Question of Continuity: A Response to Joseph S. O'Leary – W. Ezekiel Goggin: Selfhood and Sacrifice in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit – Iben Damgaard: Kierkegaard on Self and Selflessness in Critical Dialogue with MacIntyre's, Taylor's and Ricoeur's Narrative Approach to the Self – Raymond Perrier: The Grammar of 'Self': Immediacy and Mediation in Either/Or: A Response to Iben Damgaard III. The Self in Modernity Kate Kirkpatrick: 'A Perpetually Deceptive Mirage': Jean-Paul Sartre and Blaise Pascal on the Sinful (No-)Self – Eleonora Mingarelli: »It is no longer I who lives…« William James and the Process of De-selving – Stephanie Gehring: After the Will: Attention and Selfhood in Simone Weil – Joseph Prabhu: The Self in Modernity-a Diachronic and Cross-Cultural Critique – Friederike Rass: The Divine in Modernity: A Theological Tweak on Joseph Prabhu's Critique of the Modern Self IV. Self and No-Self in Asian Traditions Alexander McKinley: No Self or Ourselves? Wittgenstein and Language Games of Selfhood in a Sinhala Buddhist Form of Life – Jonardon Ganeri: Core Selves and Dynamic Attentional Centering: Between Buddhaghose and Brian O'Shaughnessy – Leah Kalmanson: Like You Mean It: Buddhist Teachings on Selflessness, Sincerity, and the Performative Practice of Liberation – Fidel Arnecillo, Jr.: Worrisome Implications of a Buddhist View of Selflessness and Moral Action: A Response to Leah Kalmanson – Gereon Kopf: Self, selflessness, and the endless search for identity: a meta-psychology of Human Folly – Deena Lin: Probing Identity: Challenging Essentializations of the Self in Ontology. A Response to Gereon Kopf – Sinkwan Cheng: Aristotle, Confucius, and a New »Right« to Connect China to Europe: What Concepts of »Self« and »Right« We Might Have without the Christian Notion of Original Sin – Robert Overy-Brown: Right Translation and Making Right: A Response to Sinkwan Cheng V. The End of the Self Dietrich Korsch: The »Fragility of the Self« and the Immortality of the Soul – Trevor Kimball: Fragile Immortality: A Response to Dietrich Korsch – Yuval Avnur: On Losing Your Self in Your Afterlife – Duncan Gale: Self-Awareness in the Afterlife: A Response to Yuval Avnur Religious, philosophical, and theological views on the self vary widely. For some the self is seen as the center of human personhood, the ultimate bearer of personal identity and the core mystery of human existence. For others the self is a grammatical error and the sense of self an existential and epistemic delusion. Buddhists contrast the Western understanding of the self as a function of the mind that helps us to organize our experiences to their view of no-self by distinguishing between no-self and not-self or between a solid or 'metaphysical' self that is an illusion and an experiential or psychological self that is not. There may be processes of 'selfing', but there is no permanent self. In Western psychology, philosophy, and theology, on the other hand, the term 'self' is often used as a noun that refers not to the performance of an activity or to a material body per se but rather to a (gendered) organism that represents the presence of something distinct from its materiality. Is this a defensible insight or a misleading representation of human experience? We are aware of ourselves in the first-person manner of our ipse -identity that cannot fully be spelled out in objectifying terms, but we also know ourselves in the third-person manner of our idem -identity, the objectified self-reference to a publicly available entity. This volume documents a critical and constructive debate between critics and defenders of the self or of the no-self that explores the intercultural dimensions of this important topic.Survey of contentsPreface Ingolf U. Dalferth: Introduction: The Debate about Self and Selflessness I. The Making of the Self through Language Ingolf U. Dalferth: Situated Selves in »Webs of Interlocution«: What Can We Learn from Grammar? – Marlene Block: God, Grammar and the Truing of the Self: A Response to Ingolf Dalferth II. The European Legacy Joseph S. O'Leary: The Self and the One in Plotinus – Marcelo Souza: A Question of Continuity: A Response to Joseph S. O'Leary – W. Ezekiel Goggin: Selfhood and Sacrifice in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit – Iben Damgaard: Kierkegaard on Self and Selflessness in Critical Dialogue with MacIntyre's, Taylor's and Ricoeur's Narrative Approach to the Self – Raymond Perrier: The Grammar of 'Self': Immediacy and Mediation in Either/Or: A Response to Iben Damgaard III. The Self in Modernity Kate Kirkpatrick: 'A Perpetually Deceptive Mirage': Jean-Paul Sartre and Blaise Pascal on the Sinful (No-)Self – Eleonora Mingarelli: »It is no longer I who lives…« William James and the Process of De-selving – Stephanie Gehring: After the Will: Attention and Selfhood in Simone Weil – Joseph Prabhu: The Self in Modernity-a Diachronic and Cross-Cultural Critique – Friederike Rass: The Divine in Modernity: A Theological Tweak on Joseph Prabhu's Critique of the Modern Self IV. Self and No-Self in Asian Traditions Alexander McKinley: No Self or Ourselves? Wittgenstein and Language Games of Selfhood in a Sinhala Buddhist Form of Life – Jonardon Ganeri: Core Selves and Dynamic Attentional Centering: Between Buddhaghose and Brian O'Shaughnessy – Leah Kalmanson: Like You Mean It: Buddhist Teachings on Selflessness, Sincerity, and the Performative Practice of Liberation – Fidel Arnecillo, Jr.: Worrisome Implications of a Buddhist View of Selflessness and Moral Action: A Response to Leah Kalmanson – Gereon Kopf: Self, selflessness, and the endless search for identity: a meta-psychology of Human Folly – Deena Lin: Probing Identity: Challenging Essentializations of the Self in Ontology. A Response to Gereon Kopf – Sinkwan Cheng: Aristotle, Confucius, and a New »Right« to Connect China to Europe: What Concepts of »Self« and »Right« We Might Have without the Christian Notion of Original Sin – Robert Overy-Brown: Right Translation and Making Right: A Response to Sinkwan Cheng V. The End of the Self Dietrich Korsch: The »Fragility of the Self« and the Immortality of the Soul – Trevor Kimball: Fragile Immortality: A Response to Dietrich Korsch – Yuval Avnur: On Losing Your Self in Your Afterlife – Duncan Gale: Self-Awareness in the Afterlife: A Response to Yuval Avnur

     

    Export to reference management software   RIS file
      BibTeX file