The unique, the singular, and the individual: Claremont studies in the philosophy of religion, conference 2018

In der aktuellen Singularitätsdebatte wird oft übersehen, dass ähnliche Debatten in anderen Bereichen schon seit langem geführt werden. Dieser Band untersucht die Bezüge zu Debatten über das Einzigartige, das Singuläre und das Individuelle in Philosophie, Theologie, Hermeneutik und Ethik.Inhalts&...

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Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: Annual Philosophy of Religion Conference 39. 2018, Claremont, Calif. (Author)
Contributors: Dalferth, Ingolf U. 1948- (Editor) ; Perrier, Raymond E. 1988- (Editor)
Format: Electronic Book
Language:English
Check availability: HBZ Gateway
Fernleihe:Fernleihe für die Fachinformationsdienste
Published: Tübingen Mohr Siebeck [2022]
In:Year: 2022
Series/Journal:Religion in philosophy and theology 122
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Uniqueness / Attributes of God / Religious philosophy
B Individuality / Ethics
Further subjects:B Collection of essays
B Old Greek
B Schleiermacher
B Mysticism
B Kierkegaard
B Continental Philosophy
B French Phenomenology
B Metaphysics
B Spinoza
B Christianity
B Maimonides
B Phenomenology
B Conference program 2018 (Claremont, Calif)
B comparability
B Islam
B American event metaphysics
B Religious philosophy
B Hegel
B Judaism
B Scotus
B Hermeneutics
B God
B Religion in Philosophy and Theology
B Kant
Online Access: Presumably Free Access
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Parallel Edition:Electronic
Description
Summary:In der aktuellen Singularitätsdebatte wird oft übersehen, dass ähnliche Debatten in anderen Bereichen schon seit langem geführt werden. Dieser Band untersucht die Bezüge zu Debatten über das Einzigartige, das Singuläre und das Individuelle in Philosophie, Theologie, Hermeneutik und Ethik.InhaltsübersichtIngolf U. Dalferth: Introduction: The Unique, the Singular, and the Individual I. Divine Uniqueness Ayat Agah: On the Essence of God's Names in Islam – Richard Cross: God and Thisness (haecceity) in Duns Scotus' Philosophy – Paul Pistone: Duns Scotus on Our Knowledge and the Nature of God – David Worsley: Knowing the Unknowable (Personally): Divine Ineffability and the Beatific Vision Revisited – Peter Ochs: Underdetermined Singularity: The Way the Creator Speaks – Daniel Nelson: Questions of an Interpreter Regarding the Interpretant: From Criticism to Construction – Randy Ramal: What is so Unique about the Qur'ān? – Hans-Peter Grosshans: The Concrete Uniqueness of God: The Contribution of Trinitarian Thought – Thomas Jared Farmer: God and the Self as Social Relation II. The Singular, the Incomparable, and the Individual Christopher D. DiBona: A Practice-Based Approach to Human and Divine Singularity: An Emerging Trend in Continental Philosophy and Theology – Richard T. Livingston: The Pluri-Singular Event in the Cosmo-Theo-Poetic Thinking of Catherine Keller and John Caputo – Norman Whitman: Singular Knowledge in Maimonides' and Spinoza's Philosophy – Sean Hannan: Individuating Time: The Indivisible Moment in Augustine and Ancient Atomism – Hartmut Von Sass: Against Structural Incomparability – Michael Lodato: Apples, Oranges, and Possible Worlds: Consequences of God's Cosmic Comparison – Miguel García-Baró: Prolegomena to an Essay on How Mystic Should Be Choral and How Religious Loneliness Must Be Reexamined – Kirsten Gerdes: Finding Truth Where We Left It III. The Concrete Individual and the Quest of Ethical Formation Jacqueline Mariña: Individuality and Subjectivity in the Ethics of Kant and Schleiermacher – Raymond E. Perrier: The Question of Moral Becoming in Kant's Practical Philosophy – Laura Martin: Love and Justice in Hegel's »The Spirit of Christianity and its Fate« – Thomas A. Lewis: The Universal, the Individual, and the Novel: Hegel, Austen, and Ethical Formation – Robin Lehleitner: Why We Come to Austen – Elisabeth Gr ä b-Schmidt: Singularity and Resonance: The Normative Force of the Individual
Debates about the unique, the singular, and the individual raise epistemological, hermeneutical, metaphysical, ethical, and theological problems. They are often discussed in separate discourses without attention to the multiple relationships that exist among these issues. This volume seeks to remedy this by linking three areas of discussion: the theological and metaphysical debates about divine uniqueness, the epistemological and hermeneutical debates about issues of singularity and (in)comparability, and the ethical debates about issues of human individuality and ethical formation. Taken together, this highlights the complex background of the current singularity debate and shows that it is worth paying attention to debates in other fields where similar questions are explored in a different way.Survey of contentsIngolf U. Dalferth: Introduction: The Unique, the Singular, and the Individual I. Divine Uniqueness Ayat Agah: On the Essence of God's Names in Islam – Richard Cross: God and Thisness (haecceity) in Duns Scotus' Philosophy – Paul Pistone: Duns Scotus on Our Knowledge and the Nature of God – David Worsley: Knowing the Unknowable (Personally): Divine Ineffability and the Beatific Vision Revisited – Peter Ochs: Underdetermined Singularity: The Way the Creator Speaks – Daniel Nelson: Questions of an Interpreter Regarding the Interpretant: From Criticism to Construction – Randy Ramal: What is so Unique about the Qur'ān? – Hans-Peter Grosshans: The Concrete Uniqueness of God: The Contribution of Trinitarian Thought – Thomas Jared Farmer: God and the Self as Social Relation II. The Singular, the Incomparable, and the Individual Christopher D. DiBona: A Practice-Based Approach to Human and Divine Singularity: An Emerging Trend in Continental Philosophy and Theology – Richard T. Livingston: The Pluri-Singular Event in the Cosmo-Theo-Poetic Thinking of Catherine Keller and John Caputo – Norman Whitman: Singular Knowledge in Maimonides' and Spinoza's Philosophy – Sean Hannan: Individuating Time: The Indivisible Moment in Augustine and Ancient Atomism – Hartmut Von Sass: Against Structural Incomparability – Michael Lodato: Apples, Oranges, and Possible Worlds: Consequences of God's Cosmic Comparison – Miguel García-Baró: Prolegomena to an Essay on How Mystic Should Be Choral and How Religious Loneliness Must Be Reexamined – Kirsten Gerdes: Finding Truth Where We Left It III. The Concrete Individual and the Quest of Ethical Formation Jacqueline Mariña: Individuality and Subjectivity in the Ethics of Kant and Schleiermacher – Raymond E. Perrier: The Question of Moral Becoming in Kant's Practical Philosophy – Laura Martin: Love and Justice in Hegel's »The Spirit of Christianity and its Fate« – Thomas A. Lewis: The Universal, the Individual, and the Novel: Hegel, Austen, and Ethical Formation – Robin Lehleitner: Why We Come to Austen – Elisabeth Gr ä b-Schmidt: Singularity and Resonance: The Normative Force of the Individual
ISBN:3161615875
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1628/978-3-16-161587-0