Dialogues between faith and reason : the death and return of God in modern German thought /

The contemporary theologian Hans Küng has asked if the "death of God," proclaimed by Nietzsche as the event of modernity, was inevitable. Did the empowering of new forms of rationality in Western culture beginning around 1500 lead necessarily to the reduction or privatization of faith? In...

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Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: Smith, John H., 1954-
Format: Licensed eBooks
Langue:anglais
Publié: Ithaca : Cornell University Press 2011.
Accès en ligne:https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7591/j.ctt7zgcp
Table des matières:
  • Introduction: Logos, Religion, and Rationality
  • Erasmus vs. Luther: Philo-logos vs. Faith
  • God and the Logos of Scientific Calculation (Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz, Pascal)
  • Kant: The Turn to Ethics as Logos
  • Hegel: Logos as Spirit (Geist)
  • Logos and Its Others: Feeling, the Abbys Willing, and Kritik (Schleiermacher, Schelling, Schopenhauer, Feuerbach)
  • Nietzsche: Logos against Itself and the Death of God
  • Being after the Death of God: Heidegger from Theo- to Onto- logos
  • Dialectical Theology (Gogarten, Barth, Bultmann)
  • "Atheistic" and Dialogical Jewish Theologies of the Other (Rosenzweig and Buber)
  • Fides et Ratio: "Right Reason" and Europe in Contemporary Catholic Thought (Benedict XVI).