Results for 'Redemption Philosophy.'

957 found
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  1.  9
    The Redemption of Thinking: A Study in the Philosophy of Thomas Aquinas.Rudolf Steiner - 1983 - SteinerBooks.
    3 lectures, Dornach, May 1920 (CW 74) Steiner begins these three lectures by depicting the background of early Christian thought, from which scholastic philosophers arose. He focuses on the "unanswered question" of the scholastic movement: How can human thinking be made Christlike and develop toward a vision of the spiritual world? A study of subsequent European thought, especially that of Kant, leads to the possibility of deepening into spiritual perception the scientific thinking that arose from scholasticism. Steiner explains that, since (...)
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  2.  31
    From Temporal Redemption to Spatial Liberation: Omar Rivera’s Delimitations of Latin American Philosophy.Julian Rios Acuña - 2021 - Journal of World Philosophies 6 (2):222-229.
    Omar Rivera’s Delimitations of Latin American Philosophy: Beyond Redemption is an important contribution to the interpretation of central figures and questions of the Latin American philosophical tradition, particularly Peruvian Marxist José Carlos Mariátegui and questions of identity and liberation. Rivera establishes productive dialogues between foundational figures such as Simón Bolívar, José Martí, and Mariátegui and decolonial thinkers like María Lugones, Aníbal Quijano, and Gloria Anzaldúa to posit delimitations of Latin American philosophy that might allow it to move beyond redemptive (...)
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  3.  16
    La philosophie de la rédemption d'après un pessimiste.Lucien Arréat - 1885 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 19:628 - 651.
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  4.  20
    Delimitations of Latin American philosophy: beyond redemption.Omar Rivera - 2019 - Bloomington, Indiana, USA: Indiana University Press, Office of Scholarly Publishing, Herman B Wells Library.
    A distinctive focus of 19th- and 20th-century Latin American philosophy is the convergence of identity formation and political liberation in ethnically and racially diverse postcolonial contexts. From this perspective, Omar Rivera interprets how a "we" is articulated and deployed in central political texts of this robust philosophical tradition. In particular, by turning to the work of Peruvian political theorist José Carlos Mariátegui among others, Rivera critiques philosophies of liberation that are invested in the redemption of oppressed identities as conditions (...)
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  5.  7
    Franz Rosenzweig's philosophy of existence: an analysis of The star of redemption.Else Freund - 1979 - Higham, MA: distribution for the U.S. and Canada, Kluwer Boston. Edited by Paul R. Mendes-Flohr.
    The Star of Redemption, * which presents Franz Rosenzweig's system of philosophy, begins with the sentence "from death, (vom Tode) , from the fear of death, originates all cognition of the All" and concludes with the words "into life. " This beginning and this conclusion of the book signify more than the first and last words of philosophical books usually do. Taken together - "from death into life" - they comprise the entire meaning of Rosenzweig's philosophy. The leitmotif of (...)
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  6.  72
    Competition, Redemption, and Hope.Scott Kretchmar - 2012 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 39 (1):101-116.
    Zero-sum aspects of sport have generated a number of ethical concerns and a similar number of defenses or apologetics. The trick has been to find a middle position that neither overly gentrifies sport nor inappropriately emphasizes the significance of winning and losing. One such position would have us focus on the process of trying to win over the fact of having one. It would also ameliorate any harms associated with defeat by pointing out that benefits like achievement, excellence, and moral (...)
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  7. The Redemption of Thinking. A Study in the Philosophy of Thomas Aquinas. [REVIEW]O. P. Eustás Ó Héideáin - 1957 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 7:178-178.
    At Whitsuntide, 1920, some five years before his death at the age of sixty-four, Dr. Rudolf Steiner, Austrian philosopher and mystic, delivered three lectures in Dornach, Switzerland, on the philosophy of Thomas Aquinas. In these lectures, now published in The Redemption of Thinking, he set himself to prove that his “Spiritual Science” was really a development of the teaching of Aquinas. The arguments on which he based this conclusion are: first, a very personal interpretation of the relation of 13th (...)
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  8.  34
    Creation, Redemption and Virtue.Caleb Miller - 1999 - Faith and Philosophy 16 (3):368-377.
    In this paper, I defend the claim that Christian theology gives us good reason to think that virtue is relative to individuals and communities, i.e., that what character traits are virtues for individuals is relative to individuals and to the communities of which they are members. I begin by reviewing the theological claims that I take to be relevant. I then argue that these claims make it plausible to conclude that virtue is morally redemptive and therefore relative to individuals and (...)
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  9.  32
    Redemption, transcendence, and spirituality, or ease, hope, and comfort? On Llanera's strong redescription of Rorty.Elin Danielsen Huckerby - 2023 - Metaphilosophy 54 (4):429-441.
    In Richard Rorty: Outgrowing Modern Nihilism, Tracy Llanera places Richard Rorty in conversation with philosophers confronting nihilism as a “malaise of modernity.” She shows how Rortyan thought offers a horizontal and relational approach to “redemption,” as opposed to religious or philosophical paths to be saved by higher beings or ideas. This essay focuses on Llanera's redescription of Rorty and whether amplifying Rorty's use of “redemption” and “transcendence” is wise. Leaving behind this laden vocabulary might better serve Llanera's purpose (...)
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  10.  8
    Redemptive hope : from the age of enlightenment to the age of Obama.Akiba Lerner - 2015 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    This is a book about the need for redemptive narratives to ward off despair and the dangers these same narratives create by raising expectations that are seldom fulfilled. The quasi-messianic expectations produced by the election of President Barack Obama in 2008, and their diminution, were stark reminders of an ongoing struggle between ideals and political realities. Redemptive Hope begins by tracing the tension between theistic thinkers, for whom hope is transcendental, and intellectuals, who have striven to link hopes for (...) to our intersubjective interactions with other human beings. Lerner argues that a vibrant democracy must draw on the best of both religious thought and secular liberal political philosophy. By bringing Richard Rorty's pragmatism into conversation with early-twentieth-century Jewish thinkers, including Martin Buber and Ernst Bloch, Lerner begins the work of building bridges, while insisting on holding crucial differences in dialectical tension. Only such a dialogue, he argues, can prepare the foundations for modes of redemptive thought fit for the twenty-first century. (shrink)
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  11.  4
    Messianism, apocalypse and redemption in twentieth century German thought.Wayne Cristaudo & Wendy Baker (eds.) - 2005 - Hindmarsh, S. Aust.: ATF Press.
    At the beginning of the twentieth century the tropes of messianism, apocalypse and redemption, which had been so central to the West's religious formation, seemed spent forces in Germany. Nietzsche had pronounced God as dead and theology seemed to be travelling the same secular route as philosophy. But World War I changed that. This book introduces some of Germany's key thinkers in theology, philosophy, literature and social and political thought through their engagement with these previously discarded concepts. They initiated (...)
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  12. Redemption from this world.Alfred George Hogg - 1922 - Edinburgh,: T. & T. Clark.
     
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  13.  49
    A Redemptive Deleuze? Choked Passages or the Politics of Contraction.Erik Bordeleau - 2014 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 8 (4):491-508.
    When they want to discredit the political relevance of Deleuze's thought, Hallward considers counter-effectuation as a ‘redemptive gesture’, and Rancière describes Deleuze's history of cinema as a ‘history of redemption’. Each time, redemption refers pejoratively to a break ‘out of this world’ and a form of apolitical passivity, in an attempt to reduce Deleuze to be a mere ‘spiritual’ thinker, simply renewing ‘that “Oriental intuition” which Hegel found at work in Spinoza's philosophy’. But is it all that simple? (...)
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  14.  9
    Redemption, settlement and agriculture in the religious teachings of Hovevei Zion.Amir Mashiach - 2021 - HTS Theological Studies 77 (4):1-9.
    Hovevei Zion is a collective name for several societies established in Eastern Europe in the 19th century, advocating immigration to the land of Israel, settlement of the land and agricultural work. This article examines the religious approach of several prominent thinkers from among Hovevei Zion and the First Aliya, who shared the perception of farming and settling the land as having religious and even messianic meaning. It was clear to them that the Torah is the foundation of the Jewish people's (...)
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  15.  30
    Children, Redemption and Remembrance in Walter Benjamin.Sharon Jessop - 2013 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 47 (4):642-657.
    Walter Benjamin wrote extensively on children and childhood, though this aspect of his work has hitherto received scant attention despite continuing and growing interest in his thought. This article makes explicit the connection between his acute observations of childhood and his distinctive messianic philosophy. The twin aspects of redemption in Benjamin's writings: remembrance and now-time, as illustrated in Wim Wender's Wings of Desire, are explored in relation to the ‘task of childhood’. Benjamin asserts the emancipatory potential held within the (...)
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  16. A Redemptive Analysis of Suffering.Daihyun Chung - 2015 - Philosophy Study 5 (10):530-536.
    The notion of suffering carries with it aspects which are private and individual on the one hand and social and lingual on the other. I would pay attention to the latter part of the suffering notion, where the notion of suffering is recognized to be primitive by almost all the theories of human values. This primitive character allows a commensurable basis on the basis of which most plural theories share something in common to talk objectively to each other. In this (...)
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  17.  15
    Delimitations of Latin American Philosophy: Beyond Redemption.Katherine A. Gordy - 2023 - Philosophy and Global Affairs 3 (1):158-162.
  18.  1
    Redemption and historical reality.Isaac C. Rottenberg - 1964 - Philadelphia,: Westminster Press.
  19. The Redemption of Saint Max: Stirner’s Critique of Marx.Jacob Blumenfeld - forthcoming - In Andrés Saenz de Sicilia, Marx and the Critique of Humanism. Bloomsbury.
    In 1844, Johann Kaspar Schmidt, under the pen name “Max Stirner”, published a blistering critique of contemporary German philosophy, politics, and society called Der Einzige und sein Eigentum. Although Engels praised the book in private letters to Marx upon its arrival, a year and a half later he and Marx went to work demolishing every sentence in a 350-page unpublished manuscript called Saint Max, eventually edited and compiled a century later into the centerpiece of the German Ideology. Saint Max—perhaps the (...)
     
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  20.  70
    The redemption of truth: Idealization, acceptability and fallibilism in Habermas' theory of meaning.Barbara Fultner - 1996 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 4 (2):233 – 251.
    Abstract Jürgen Habermas has proposed a tripartite classification of analytic philosophy of language into formal semantics, intentionalistic semantics, and use?theories of meaning. Here, I focus on the relationship between formal semantics and Habermas? own account of meaning and truth. I argue against his early ?consensus theory of truth?, according to which truth is defined as idealized warranted assertibility and explained by the ?discursive redemption? of validity claims. A claim is discursively redeemed if it commands rationally motivated consensus of all (...)
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  21.  14
    Religion, Redemption and Revolution: The New Speech Thinking of Franz Rosenzweig and Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy.Wayne Cristaudo - 2012 - University of Toronto Press.
    Which Spirit to Serve? The Stirring of the Living Loving God -- The Basis of the New Speech Thinking -- Grammatical Organons in Rosenstock-Huessy and Rosenzweig -- On God as an Indissoluble Name and an Indispensable Pole of the Real -- The Sundered and the Whole: Rosenzweig's Distinction between Pagans and the Elect -- Rosenstock-Huessy's Incarnatory Christianity -- The Ages of the Church and Redemption through Revolution -- The Modern Humanistic Turn of the French Revolution in Rosenstock-Huessy -- Beyond (...)
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  22.  30
    Redemption.Abbas Zaidi - 2010 - Philosophy Now 80:51-54.
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  23.  52
    Humanist Redemption and Afterlife: The Frankfurt School in Communist Romania.Alexandru Cistelecan - 2022 - Historical Materialism 30 (2):56-90.
    This paper discusses the reception of Frankfurt School critical theory in Communist Romania. After some opening remarks concerning the relevance of this topic, Section 2 sketches the evolving political and historical contexts that circumscribed this philosophical reception. The content and configuration of the Romanian reception of critical theory is then discussed in a double sequence: first (Section 3), by surveying and analysing the main clusters of arguments developed in these texts, which are filtered and classified into four categories: a) general (...)
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  24.  24
    Mimesis, Critique, Redemption: Creaturely life in and beyond Dialectic of Enlightenment.J. F. Dorahy - 2014 - Colloquy 27.
    The idea of creaturely life has, in recent years, emerged as an important and illuminating category of literary and philosophical critique. In this paper I seek to contribute to this contemporary discourse by examining the references to the creaturely found in the writings of T.W. Adorno. Whilst much attention has been paid to Walter Benjamin’s reflections on creatureliness, Adorno, a thinker with whom Benjamin is often associated, has received comparatively little in this regard. I begin to redress this lacuna by (...)
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  25. Redemptive suffering.M. Mc Cord Adams, R. Audi & W. Wainwright - 1986 - In Robert Audi & William J. Wainwright, Rationality, religious belief, and moral commitment: new essays in the philosophy of religion. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
     
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  26. The redemption of international relations.Dr Hilda Oakeley - 1946 - Hibbert Journal: A Quarterly Review of Religion, Theology, and Philosophy 44:45.
     
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  27.  24
    The star of redemption.Franz Rosenzweig - 1971 - Notre Dame, IN.: Notre Dame Press.
    Fusing philosophy and theology, the book assigns both Judaism and Christianity distinct but equally important roles in the spiritual structure of the world and ...
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  28.  33
    (1 other version)The redemption of the robot.Herbert Read - 1966 - New York: [Trident Press].
  29.  9
    The Star of Redemption.Barbara E. Galli (ed.) - 2005 - University of Wisconsin Press.
    _The Star of Redemption_ is essential reading for anyone interested in understanding religion and philosophy in the twentieth century. Fusing philosophy and theology, the book assigns both Judaism and Christianity distinct but equally important roles in the spiritual structure of the world. Franz Rosenzweig finds in both biblical religions approaches to a comprehension of reality. The major themes and motifs of The Star—the birth, life, death, and the immortality of the soul; Eastern philosophies and Jewish mysticism; the relationship between God, (...)
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  30.  81
    Kantian Redemption.Stephen R. Palmquist - 2007 - Philosophia Christi 9 (1):29-38.
    The most common complaints against Kant by religious readers center around various challenges he poses to the way many people practice their religion or conceive of their theological commitments. Thinking Kant is out to destroy their most cherished beliefs, many readers remain unaware that he poses these challenges in the hope of leading us to a religiously healthy way of meeting these very challenges. Here I briefly mention three of Kant’s most important challenges and how he thought religious persons ought (...)
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  31. Melancholic Redemption and the Hopelessness of Hope.Elliot R. Wolfson - 2022 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 30 (1):130-171.
    Since late antiquity, a connection was made between Jews and the psychological state of despondency based, in part, on the link between melancholy and Saturn, and the further association of the Hebrew name of that planet, Shabbetai, and the Sabbath. The melancholic predisposition has had important anthropological, cosmological, and theological repercussions. In this essay, I focus on various perspectives on melancholia in thinkers as diverse as Kafka, Levinas, Blanchot, Rosenzweig, Benjamin, Bloch, Scholem, and Derrida. A common thread that links these (...)
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  32.  67
    The redemption of experience: On Walter Benjamin’s ‘hermeneutical materialism’.Benjamin Loveluck - 2011 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 37 (2):167-188.
    The aim of this article is to show how philosopher and critic Walter Benjamin related to the hermeneutical tradition — and tried to move beyond it by ‘redeeming’ human experience, while avoiding the pitfalls of the philosophy of ‘authenticity’. Though convinced that questions relating to historicity were central to any understanding of modern human experience, Benjamin explicitly rejected the Heideggerian alternative, and chose a path closer to Hans-Georg Gadamer’s. He attempted to combine theological interpretation with dialectical materialism, always grounding hermeneutics (...)
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  33.  91
    Redeeming redemption: The utopian dimension of critical social theory.Maeve Cooke - 2004 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 30 (4):413-429.
    Critical social theory has an uneasy relationship with utopia. On the one hand, the idea of an alternative, better social order is necessary in order to make sense of its criticisms of a given social context. On the other hand, utopian thinking has to avoid ‘bad utopianism’, defined as lack of connection with the actual historical process, and ‘finalism’, defined as closure of the historical process. Contemporary approaches to critical social theory endeavour to avoid these dangers by way of a (...)
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  34. Personal and redemptive forgiveness.Christopher Bennett - 2003 - European Journal of Philosophy 11 (2):127–144.
    Some philosophers think that forgiveness should only be granted in response to the wrongdoer’s repentance, while others think that forgiveness can properly be given unconditionally. In this paper I show that both of these positions are partially correct. In redemptive forgiveness we wipe the wrong from the offender’s moral record. It is wrong to forgive redemptively in the absence of some atonement. Personal forgiveness, on the other hand, is granted when the victim overcomes inappropriate though humanly understandable feelings of hate (...)
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  35.  16
    Foi et savoir: autour de l'étoile de la rédemption.Franz Rosenzweig - 2001 - Paris: Librairie Philosophique J Vrin.
    Avec Walter Benjamin, Franz Rosenzweig (1886-1929) est sans conteste l'une des figures les plus originales de la pensée allemande du début du XXe siècle. Les effets de ses œuvres ont été immédiatement sensibles dans toutes les orientations du judaïsme allemand, au cours même de l'identité allemande lorsqu'avec Martin Buber il donna une nouvelle traduction de la Bible, et, plus généralement, dans la philosophie qui voulait, comme la pensée de Heidegger, rompre avec l'idéalisme, la tradition métaphysique ou avec les illusions du (...)
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  36.  8
    The redemption of thinking.Rudolf Steiner - 1956 - [London]: Hodder & Stoughton.
    3 lectures, Dornach, May 1920 (CW 74) Steiner begins these three lectures by depicting the background of early Christian thought, from which scholastic philosophers arose. He focuses on the "unanswered question" of the scholastic movement: How can human thinking be made Christlike and develop toward a vision of the spiritual world? A study of subsequent European thought, especially that of Kant, leads to the possibility of deepening into spiritual perception the scientific thinking that arose from scholasticism. Steiner explains that, since (...)
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  37.  23
    Narrative Redemption: A Commentary of McGregor's Narrative Justice.Vladimir Rizov - 2020 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 54 (4):26-35.
    Rafe McGregor's Narrative Justice provides a powerful argument for the merit of an education by and through aesthetics as a way of challenging criminal inhumanity. As a work at the intersection of critical criminology and philosophy, it is a challenging and thoughtful articulation of the criminological imagination.1 Ultimately, McGregor's argument highlights the possibility of a political education through aesthetic engagement. The exemplary narratives that McGregor uses are varied and richly evocative. My commentary on the book is in keeping with this (...)
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  38.  61
    (1 other version)Black Lives Matter and the politics of redemption.Charles Olney - 2021 - Sage Publications Ltd: Philosophy and Social Criticism 48 (7):956-976.
    Philosophy & Social Criticism, Volume 48, Issue 7, Page 956-976, September 2022. This article explores the role of practical political theory in the Black Lives Matter movement. I argue that BLM represents a multifaceted engagement with the complicated politics of redemption that lies at the heart of American democracy. In one sense, BLM stands for the integration of black life into the framework of political value, and thus for a redemption of the promise of ‘justice for all’. In (...)
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  39.  10
    Thinking in translation: scripture and redemption in the thought of Franz Rosenzweig.Orr Scharf - 2019 - Berlin: De Gruyter.
    Thinking in Translation posits the Hebrew Bible as the fulcrum of the thought of Franz Rosenzweig (1886-1929), underpinning a unique synthesis between systematic thinking and biblical interpretation. Addressing a lacuna in Rosenzweig scholarship, the book offers a critical evaluation of his engagement with the Bible through a comparative study of The Star of Redemption and his Bible translation with Martin Buber. The book opens with Rosenzweig's rejection of German Idealism and fascination with the sources of Judaism. It then analyzes (...)
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  40.  25
    The Ideal of a Philosophic Redemption: Baruch Spinoza’s Place in Western Philosophy and in Santayana’s Thought.Lydia Amir - 2024 - In Martin A. Coleman & Glenn Tiller, The Palgrave Companion to George Santayana’s Scepticism and Animal Faith. Springer Nature Switzerland. pp. 309-324.
    Amir investigates Santayana’s statements about Spinoza in Scepticism and Animal Faith. She answers the question of how Santayana can acknowledge Spinoza as “his master” and “hero” while systematically rejecting Spinoza’s philosophy.
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  41. Redemptive suffering: A Christian solution to the problem of evil.Marilyn McCord Adams - 1986 - In Robert Audi & William J. Wainwright, Rationality, religious belief, and moral commitment: new essays in the philosophy of religion. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
     
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  42.  43
    Redemption in the Midst of Phantasmagoria.Drucilla Cornell - 2005 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 79:29-40.
    Socialism has been dismissed as a dream in the reality of the world of 9/11. But a mythical narrative that erases the possibility of moral agency doesnot honor the dead. In Walter Benjamin’s language, photographs of the actual dead can supply the “dialectical jolt” that illuminates a possible beyond. Myth isdangerous when it teaches that things will always be as they are now, but myth can also point to a different form of knowledge of the world, beyond the despairthat says (...)
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  43.  52
    The redemptive instant.Mary McAllester Jones - 2003 - Philosophy Today 47 (5):124-131.
  44.  5
    The Star of Redemption.William W. Hallo (ed.) - 1971 - University of Notre Dame Press.
    “Franz Rosenzweig’s _The Start of Redemption _is one of the few lasting books of our century, a work whose originality transcends the disciplinary limits of philosophy and religion and which must be read by anyone whose concern with the meaning of daily life is urgent and abiding.” —_Maurice Natanson, Yale University_ _The Star of Redemption _is widely recognized as a key document of modern existential thought and a significant contribution to Jewish theology in the twentieth century. An affirmation (...)
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  45.  22
    L’Étoile de la Rédemption : « livre juif » ou « système philosophique »?Sophie Nordmann - 2019 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 129 (2):283-297.
    Dans son article « La pensée nouvelle », paru en 1925, Franz Rosenzweig affirme à propos de L’Étoile de la rédemption, qu’il ne s’agit pas d’un « livre juif » mais d’un « système philosophique ». Il revient pourtant, quelques pages plus loin, sur cette affirmation, pour déclarer cette fois qu’« il s’agit bien d’un livre juif ». Comment comprendre le sens de ces deux affirmations de prime abord antithétiques? En quel sens L’Étoile peut‑elle, à la fois, être et n’être (...)
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  46.  75
    (1 other version)Richard Rorty and the concept of redemption.Tracy Llanera - 2016 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion:1-16.
    It is curious why a secular pragmatist like Richard Rorty would capitalize on the religiously-laden concept of redemption in his recent writings. But more than being an intriguing idea in his later work, this essay argues that redemption plays a key role in the historical development of Rorty’s thought. It begins by exploring the paradoxical status of redemption in Rorty’s oeuvre. It then investigates an overlooked debate between Rorty, Dreyfus and Taylor that first endorses the concept. It (...)
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  47. On violence and redemption : Fanon and colonial theodicy.An Yountae - 2021 - In An Yountae & Eleanor Craig, Beyond man: race, coloniality, and philosophy of religion. Durham: Duke University Press.
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  48.  87
    From fall to redemption.Todd J. LeVasseur - 2008 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 21 (6):597-606.
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  49.  8
    Of Divine Economy: Refinancing Redemption.Laura Stivers - 2006 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 26 (1):209-211.
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  50.  25
    Biblical worldview: creation, fall, redemption.Mark L. Ward - 2016 - Greenville, South Carolina: BJU Press. Edited by Brian Collins, Bryan Smith, Gregory Stiekes & Dennis Cone.
    Are your students prepared? Are they ready to view the world through biblical lenses? Are they equipped to engage the world with scriptural discernment? Biblical Worldview: Creation, Fall, Redemption is a tool that helps teachers equip 11th or 12th grade students with a Christian understanding of all major academic disciplines and cultural arenas. Course goals: Define worldview and demonstrate how worldviews influence the way people think about all of life; Analyze a Biblical worldview in terms of Creation, Fall and (...)
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