8 found
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Aloysius Ezeoba [5]Aloysius N. Ezeoba [4]Aloysius Nnaemeka Ezeoba [2]
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Aloysius N. Ezeoba
Bigard Memorial Seminary, Enugu, Nigeria
  1.  30
    Norris W. Clarke’s “Substance-in-Relation”.Aloysius N. Ezeoba - 2023 - Philosophy Today 67 (3):677-696.
    W. Norris Clarke described his personalism as “substance-in-relation,” which emphasizes the equality of primordial modes of substance and relation as a solution to the dichotomy between substance and relation created in the history of metaphysics of the human person. African personalism seems to conceive the human person as essentially relational, which is mostly expressed in the saying: “I am because we are.” Though some contemporary African scholars, like Molefe, try to indicate the priority of the individual, the relational concept remains (...)
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  2. Globalization, Imperialism and Christianity: The Nigerian Perspective.Aloysius Ezeoba - 2010 - African Research Review 4 (3a):75-89.
    Abstract There appears to be very close link between globalization and imperialism. Both seem to have domineering character. Globalization could be likened to a new wave of imperialism as it could be adjudged the process by which the so called superior powers of the West dominate and influence developing countries like Nigeria. They are expansionist in nature. Christianity has the same expansionist features as globalization and imperialism. The imperialist nature of globalization could be assessed from the expansionist activities of Christianity (...)
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  3.  11
    God’s absolute immutability vis-a-vis his real relation with the world.Aloysius Nnaemeka Ezeoba - 2023 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 95 (1):29-47.
    The absolute immutability of God, as it was expounded by many ancient and medieval thinkers such as Aristotle and St. Thomas Aquinas, contends that God has no real relation with the world, but only a relation of reason. This view lingered until contemporary scholars like the process thinkers such as Alfred North Whitehead and his disciple, Charles Hartshorne, argued that God has a dipolar meaning that God influences the world and that the world also influences him. While protecting God's intrinsic (...)
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  4.  20
    Causal Power of the Substance of the Human Person vis-à-vis the Physicalists’ Causality.Aloysius Nnaemeka Ezeoba - 2022 - Kritike 16 (1):41-57.
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  5.  20
    The Metaphysical Concept of Chi: An equal ontological mode to the notion of Community in Africa.Aloysius Ezeoba - 2022 - Academia Letters 4 (5347):1-7.
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  6.  31
    African Eschatology: Igbo Perspective.Aloysius Ezeoba - 2018 - Charleston, SC: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform.
    Eschatology is the study of end things—death and what lies beyond. Nearly all religions tackle the topic in one way or another. Theologians debate the different concepts of death, interment rituals, funeral rituals, final judgment, and the afterlife. Traditional African religions are no exception. -/- However, among scholars, the subject of African eschatology has lacked consistency and a coherent view. African Eschatology presents the concepts of end things as they are viewed in Africa as a whole but focuses especially on (...)
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  7. Interpretations of Logos in the Prologue 0F John’s Gospel: An Attempt at Synthesis.Aloysius Ezeoba & B. A. C. Obiefuna - 2010 - African Journal of Local Societies Initiative (Losi) 1:109-115.
    The logos has· been interpreted in any way by different scholars and· the · proper ·interpretation seems not to be clear. There seems to be a contradiction in the prologue, Jn 1 :1. Again, what is the relationship of the logos to the father as it appears in the prologue? The purpose of this study is to try an attempt a synthesis of those varied interpretations. The significance of the study is that it will help students of scriptures to have (...)
     
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  8. THEOLOGIZJNG IN A POVERTY-STRICKEN SOCIETY: THE NIGERIAN EXPERIENCE.Aloysius Ezeoba & B. A. C. Obiefuna - 2012 - In A. B. C. Chiegboka, A. I. Okodo, E. C. Umezinwa & I. L. Umeanolue (eds.), A bountiful harvest: Festschrift in honour of Very Rev. Msgr. Prof. J. P. C. Uzomiwu. Rex Charles and Patrick. pp. 311-323.
    Nigeria is seen as a poverty-stricken society as about 70% of her estimated 138 million population live in abject poverty. She is a nation blessed with mineral resources like crude oil, limestone, iron ore, timber, coal and a host of other commodities. Yet, majority of her citizenry lives in grinding poverty. Nigeria has been rated one of the most corrupt nations in the world. In fact, corruption has constituted an albatross for the progress of the nation. To do theology (to (...)
     
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