Results for ' death of god'

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  1.  2
    The Death of God as Source of the Creativity of Humans.Franke William - 2024 - Philosophies 9 (3):55.
    Although declarations of the death of God seem to be provocations announcing the end of the era of theology, this announcement is actually central to the Christian revelation in its most classic forms, as well as to its reworkings in contemporary religious thought. Indeed provocative new possibilities for thinking theologically open up precisely in the wake of the death of God. Already Hegel envisaged a revolutionary new realization of divinity emerging in and with the secular world through its (...)
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  2.  22
    The Death of God and the Meaning of Life.Julian Young - 2003 - New York: Routledge.
    What is the meaning of life? In today's secular, post-religious scientific world, this question has become a serious preoccupation. But it also has a long history: many major philosophers have thought deeply about it, as Julian Young so vividly illustrates in this thought-provoking second edition of _The Death of God and the Meaning of Life_. Three new chapters explore Søren Kierkegaard’s attempts to preserve a Christian answer to the question of the meaning of life, Karl Marx's attempt to translate (...)
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  3. The Death of God and the Meaning of Life.Julian Young - 2003 - New York: Routledge.
    What is the meaning of life? In the post-modern, post-religious scientific world, this question is becoming a preoccupation. But it also has a long history: many major figures in philosophy had something to say on the subject, as Julian Young so vividly illustrates in this thought-provoking book. Part One of the book presents an historical overview of philosophers from Plato to Hegel and Marx who have believed in some sort of meaning of life, either in some supposed 'other' world or (...)
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  4. The Death of God and the Death of Morality.Brian Leiter - 2019 - The Monist 102 (3):386-402.
    Nietzsche famously proclaimed the “death of God,” but in so doing it was not God’s death that was really notable—Nietzsche assumes that most reflective, modern readers realize that “the belief in the Christian god has become unbelievable” —but the implications of that belief becoming unbelievable, namely, “how much must collapse now that this faith has been undermined,” in particular, “the whole of our European morality”. What is the connection between the death of God and the death (...)
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  5.  36
    Hegel: Death of God and Recognition of the Self.Paolo Diego Bubbio - 2015 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 23 (5):689-706.
    This paper covers the theme of the death of God considered from a Hegelian standpoint. For Aristotle, the image of God as ‘thought thinking itself’ was an image of the knowledge aspired to in philosophy. With the notion of God becoming man and his insistence on the icon of the Cross, Hegel challenged the Aristotelian goal of philosophy as immutable knowledge of an ‘ultimate’ reality. Hegel viewed the crisis of normativity as strictly linked to the conception of the self. (...)
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  6.  79
    Tragedy, Recognition, and the Death of God: Studies in Hegel and Nietzsche.Robert R. Williams - 2012 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    Robert R. Williams offers a bold new account of divergences and convergences in the work of Hegel and Nietzsche. He explores four themes - the philosophy of tragedy; recognition and community; critique of Kant; and the death of God - and explicates both thinkers' critiques of traditional theology and metaphysics.
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  7. The death of God and the theologycal issue.Carlos Enrique Restrepo - 2008 - Eidos: Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Del Norte 8:182-194.
    Heideggerian interpretation of the “Death of God” that not only includes Nietzsche, but the whole modern philosophy, it entails the essential importance of a movement according to which Metaphysics is overcome. In Heidegger’s words, after Nietzsche “the only road for Philosophy is its perversión and denaturalization, so we have no other alternatives in view for her”. This overcoming indicates the consummation of Onto-Theology like fundamental mark of Metaphysics, of which Hegel offers his more radical interpretation when he thinks the (...)
     
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  8. The “Death of God” and the theological issue. Approaches to the work of Jean-Luc Marion. [Spanish].Carlos Enrique Restrepo - 2008 - Eidos: Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Del Norte 8:182-194.
    La interpretación heideggeriana de la “muerte de Dios” que comprende no sólo a Nietzsche, sino el conjunto de la filosofía moderna, entraña la esencial significación de un movimiento según el cual la metafísica llega a ser superada. En palabras de Heidegger, después de Nietzsche “a la filosofía sólo le queda pervertirse y desnaturalizarse, de modo que ya no se divisan otras posibilidades para ella”. Esta superación apunta a la consumación de la onto-teología en cuanto marca fundamental de la metafísica, de (...)
     
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  9.  13
    Humanism and the Death of God: Searching for the Good After Darwin, Marx, and Nietzsche.Ronald E. Osborn - 2017 - New York, New York: Oxford University Press UK.
    Humanism and the Death of God is a critical exploration of secular humanism and its discontents. Through close readings of three exemplary nineteenth-century philosophical naturalists or materialists, who perhaps more than anyone set the stage for our contemporary quandaries when it comes to questions of human nature and moral obligation, Ronald E. Osborn argues that "the death of God" ultimately tends toward the death of liberal understandings of the human as well. Any fully persuasive defense of humanistic (...)
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  10.  13
    Heidegger and the Death of God: Between Plato and Nietzsche.Duane Armitage - 2017 - Cham: Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan.
    This book presents a reading of Martin Heidegger's philosophy as an effort to strike a middle position between the philosophies of Plato and Friedrich Nietzsche. Duane Armitage interprets the history of Western philosophy as comprising a struggle over the meaning of "being," and argues that this struggle is ultimately between materialism and idealism, and, in the end, between atheism and theism. This work therefore concerns the question of the meaning of the so called "death of God" in the context (...)
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  11.  20
    “Hermeneutics,”“Death of God” and “Dissolution of the Subject”: A Phenomenological Appraisal.Matthieu Casalis - 1978 - In Ronald Bruzina & Bruce W. Wilshire (eds.), Crosscurrents in Phenomenology. Martinus Nijhoff. pp. 262--275.
  12. The death of God and the life of being: Heidegger's confrontation with Nietzsche.Tracy Colony - 2011 - In Daniel Dahlstrom (ed.), Interpreting Heidegger: Critical Essays. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. pp. 197-216.
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  13.  41
    The Death of God and Philosophy’s Untimely Gospel.Virgilio Aquino Rivas - 2009 - Kritike 3 (1):139-154.
    True enough, not many of the human lot we know, not least of all thosewe may chance upon in life in an intricate tangle of modern socialformations where individuals get to interface rather unreflectively mostof the time, would be so generous as to bestow a casual interest in philosophy. Two thousand years ago, this kind of antipathy toward philosophy made its point well when a man named Socrates was condemned to death, proof rather of the unchanging isometrics of equivocation (...)
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  14.  2
    Death of God, Nihilism, Human Existence. Gabriel Marcel and Friedrich Nietzsche.Paolo Scolari - 2023 - Revista Dialectus 28 (28):203-221.
    In the lecture Nietzsche: l’homme devant la mort de dieu, Gabriel Marcel highlights the extraordinary topicality of Nietzsche’s thought and figure. The French philosopher seems to say to his hearers: Nietzsche is here, among us, he does not belong to the past, but, on the contrary, he is the most contemporary of contemporaries. Nietzsche’s philosophy of the death of God is a mine of ideas and insights that need to be enhanced. There is still much about him to be (...)
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  15.  20
    The Death of God and the Death of Persons.J. Kellenberger - 1980 - Religious Studies 16 (3):263 - 282.
    ‘God is dead’ can mean many things. It can mean that the way God has been thought of is no longer adequate, or that there is no God and never has been, or that human consciousness of God has receded. 1 Our concern in what follows begins with ‘the death of God’ in this last sense, in the specific sense of the death of an awareness of God or of an affective consciousness of God. Or rather, this is (...)
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  16.  5
    Culture and the Death of God.Terry Eagleton - 2014 - Yale University Press.
    _New observations on the persistence of God in modern times and why “authentic” atheism is so very hard to come by_ How to live in a supposedly faithless world threatened by religious fundamentalism? Terry Eagleton, formidable thinker and renowned cultural critic, investigates in this thought-provoking book the contradictions, difficulties, and significance of the modern search for a replacement for God. Engaging with a phenomenally wide range of ideas, issues, and thinkers from the Enlightenment to today, Eagleton discusses the state of (...)
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  17.  3
    Culture and the Death of God.Terry Eagleton - 2014 - Yale University Press.
    _New observations on the persistence of God in modern times and why “authentic” atheism is so very hard to come by_ How to live in a supposedly faithless world threatened by religious fundamentalism? Terry Eagleton, formidable thinker and renowned cultural critic, investigates in this thought-provoking book the contradictions, difficulties, and significance of the modern search for a replacement for God. Engaging with a phenomenally wide range of ideas, issues, and thinkers from the Enlightenment to today, Eagleton discusses the state of (...)
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  18. The Death of God.H. P. Rickman - 1960 - Hibbert Journal 59:220.
     
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  19.  7
    The deaths of God.J. Lobocki - 2008 - Kwartalnik Filozoficzny 36 (1):149-179.
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  20.  16
    The 'death of God' theology: Some philosophical reflections.S. J. Michael Simpson - 1969 - Heythrop Journal 10 (4):371–389.
  21. The death of God and the crisis of present Bourgeois thought.S. Hubik - 1982 - Filosoficky Casopis 30 (4):664-668.
     
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  22.  40
    The death of God and the meaning of life by Julian young.M. Ray - 2006 - Heythrop Journal 47 (4):669–670.
  23.  11
    The Death of God and the Meaning of Life By Julian Young.M. Ray - 2006 - Heythrop Journal 47 (4):669-670.
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  24.  11
    The ‘Death of God’ Theology: Some Philosophical Reflections.Michael Simpson - 1969 - Heythrop Journal 10 (4):371-389.
  25.  55
    The death of God and Hegel's system of philosophy.Deland Anderson - 1996 - Sophia 35 (1):35-61.
  26.  13
    29. The Death of God: Friedrich Nietzsche.Nigel Warburton - 2011 - In A Little History of Philosophy. Yale University Press. pp. 171-175.
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  27.  41
    After the Death of God.Gianni Vattimo & John D. Caputo - 2007 - Columbia University Press.
    In these original essays and interviews, leading hermeneutical philosophers and postmodern theorists John D. Caputo and Gianni Vattimo engage with each other's past and present work on the subject and reflect on our transition from ...
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  28. After the death of God: Varieties of Nietzschean religion.Steven E. Aschheim - 1988 - Nietzsche Studien 17 (1):218-249.
    "After the Death of God: Varieties of Nietzschean Religion" .
     
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  29.  49
    On the Death of God in Lacan – A Nuanced Atheism.Tom Dalzell - 2022 - Heythrop Journal 63 (1):27-34.
    This article examines the death of God theme in the work of Jacques Lacan and indicates some convergences with Christian theology. It distinguishes the ‘atheism’ of Lacan from the atheism of Freud. And it demonstrates that if Lacan does not believe in the God equated with Being, the God of the philosophers, the later Lacan’s argument for what he calls the ‘eksistence’ of God beyond language, the God of the mystics, makes for a highly nuanced atheism.
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  30.  11
    The Death of God, Systemic Evolution, and the Event: On the Temporality of International Law.Walter Rech - 2018 - Télos 2018 (185):165-185.
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  31. Arkangel and the Death of God: A Nietzschean Critique of Technology’s Soteriological Scheme.Amber Bowen & Megan Fritts - 2022 - In John Anthony Dunne & Amber Bowen (eds.), Theology and Black Mirror. Fortress Academic. pp. 101-115.
    In this essay, we analyze the Black Mirror episode "Arkangel" alongside Nietzsche’s critique of religion. After providing an overview of his critique, we argue that the episode demonstrates how a world enframed by technology itself ends up being just as decadent, or just as pathological, repressive, corrupt, anti-life, and unredemptive as Nietzsche accuses Christianity of being. Nietzsche thought, at one point, that science and technology might provide a non-metaphysical or non-theological solution to what he calls our “metaphysical need.” However, Arkangel (...)
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  32.  39
    The Death of God in the American Catholic College.Richard W. Clancey - 1968 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 43 (1):39-52.
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  33.  16
    After the Death of God and the Death of Man.Emmanuel Falque - 2022 - Critical Hermeneutics 5 (2).
    This paper states that as there is the “death of God” (Nietzsche), there is also the "death of man" (Foucault). The first will be interpreted either as the truth of the God who dies (theologies of the death of God), or as the death of the principle (Heidegger), or as the death of the living God and of his resurrection power (Nietzsche's true interpretation). The second one can certainly consecrate the human as an “fabricated problem” (...)
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  34.  15
    Nietzsche and the death of God: selected writings.Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche - 1996 - Boston, MA: Bedford/St. Martin. Edited by Peter Fritzsche.
    Nietzsche's importance -- Nietzsche's ideas -- Nietzsche's legacy -- Aphorisms, 1875-1889 -- On truths and lies in an extramoral sense, 1873 -- On the uses and disadvantages of history for life, 1874 -- Human, all too human, 1878 -- The gay science, 1882 -- Thus spoke Zarathustra, 1883-1884 -- Beyond good and evil, 1886 -- On the genealogy of morals, 1887.
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  35.  29
    Sartre and the Death of God.John H. Gillespie - 2016 - Sartre Studies International 22 (1).
  36.  7
    Nietzsche's Death of God.Tom Grimwood - 2011-09-16 - In Michael Bruce & Steven Barbone (eds.), Just the Arguments. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 52–56.
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  37.  7
    The age of atheists: how we have sought to live since the death of god.Peter Watson - 2014 - New York: Simon & Schuster.
    The distinguished historian and author of The Medici Conspiracy examines atheism as a modern intellectual achievement that has motivated individuals to pursue invention and self-reliance, citing the accomplishments of secular philosophers, scientists and artists who have worked in the absence of religious belief.
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  38. Christianity and the death of God.Santiago Zabala - 2005 - Common Knowledge 11 (1):33-40.
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  39.  13
    CHAPTER 5.The Death of God.Terry Eagleton - 2014 - In Culture and the Death of God. Yale University Press. pp. 151-173.
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  40. The Paradox and Death of God.William Earle - 1963 - In William A. Earle, James M. Edie & John Wild (eds.), Christianity and existentialism. [Evanston, Ill.]: Northwestern University Press. pp. 82.
     
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  41.  81
    Science, Morality, and the Death of God.Raymond D. Bradley - unknown
    Back in 1922, American essayist H. L. Mencken wrote a little essay titled "Memorial Service". Here's how he began: Where is the graveyard of dead gods? What lingering mourner waters their mounds? There was a day when Jupiter was the king of the gods, and any man who doubted his puissance [power] was ipso facto a barbarian and an ignoramus. But where in all the world is there a man who worships Jupiter today? And what of Huitzilopochtli [wee-tsee-lohpoch'-tlee]? In one (...)
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  42.  5
    Orthodoxy and the death of God: essays in contemporary theology.A. M. Allchin - 1971 - [London],: Fellowship of St Alban and St Sergius.
  43.  35
    Hospitality After the Death of God.Tracy McNulty - 2005 - Diacritics 35 (1):71-98.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:diacritics 35.1 (2005) 71-98MuseSearchJournalsThis JournalContents[Access article in PDF]Hospitality after the Death of GodTracy McNultyPierre Klossowski's fiction has been only sporadically published in English, and largely dismissed as perverse erotica or soft-core porn. When his 1965 trilogy Les lois de l'hospitalité was partially translated in English (under the title Roberte, ce soir & The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes), its Library of Congress classification characterized it simply as (...)
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  44. Nietzsche and the Death of God.Justin Remhof - 2018 - 1000-Word Philosophy.
    This introductory essay addresses Nietzsche's famous claim that God is dead, develops his arguments for it, and examines its potential implications for contemporary religious and ethical thought.
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  45.  4
    Nietzsche's Death of God and Italian Philosophy.Vanessa Di Stefano (ed.) - 2016 - London: Rowman & Littlefield International.
    With a preface by Gianni Vattimo, this book offers both an overview of contemporary Italian philosophy and a new interpretation of Nietzsche’s ‘God is Dead’ in connection with the notion of freedom as the original dynamic of the will to power.
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  46.  18
    Schopenhauer's philosophy of religion: the death of God and the Oriental Renaissance.Christopher Ryan - 2010 - Leuven: Peeters.
    This book is the first comprehensive study of Schopenhauer's philosophy of religion. It develops a contextual account of Schopenhauer's relation to the religions of India by placing his interpretation of their main doctrines within the perspective of his diagnosis of the religious situation in nineteenth-century Europe, and his revised conception of the proper content and methods of metaphysical philosophy in the wake of Kant. It shows that Schopenhauer's encounter with the religions of India was the stimulus for his formulation of (...)
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  47.  9
    Nietzsche's Death of God and Italian Philosophy.Emilio Carlo Corriero - 2016 - London: Rowman & Littlefield International.
    With a preface by Gianni Vattimo, this book offers both an overview of contemporary Italian philosophy and a new interpretation of Nietzsche’s ‘God is Dead’ in connection with the notion of freedom as the original dynamic of the will to power.
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  48. Thinking through the death of God: A critical companion.to Thomas Jj Altizer - 2008 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 39 (1).
  49.  31
    Bioethics After the Death of God.Mark J. Cherry - 2018 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 43 (6):615-630.
    In After God: Morality & Bioethics in a Secular Age, Professor H. Tristram Engelhardt, Jr. argues that the now dominant intellectual culture of the West actively shuns any transcendent point of orientation, such as an appeal to God or to a God’s eye perspective on reality. Instead, it seeks to frame its understanding of reality and morality, and thus its bioethics, without reference to any foundation outside of particular human concerns. This article explores the implications of living in a secular (...)
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  50.  14
    Culture and the Death of God.Matthew Mutter - 2015 - Common Knowledge 21 (3):512-513.
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