2000 Years and Beyond

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anthropology
archaic
Archaic Religion
Category=JBCC
Category=QDHR
Category=QRAB
Clue
common
Common Era
cultural identity formation
Disengage
Enlightenment Humanism
Enlightenment Thinkers
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
era
Final Solution
Follow
Good Life
Held
Human Beings
Inclined
John Gray
Millennial Capitalism
mimetic
Mimetic Crisis
Mimetic Desire
Mimetic Rivalry
Occult Economies
Paul The Apostle
philosophical
philosophy of religion
postmodern theology
Pyramid Schemes
religion
richard
rivalry
schacht
secularisation theory
Single Victim
twentieth-century catastrophes
Unanimous Violence
Unlimited
value pluralism debate
Victim Stigmas
Victimage Mechanism
western humanism and faith transition

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415278072
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Oct 2002
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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2000 Years and Beyond brings together some of the most eminent thinkers of our time - specialists in philosophy, theology, anthropology and cultural theory. In a horizon-scanning work, they look backwards and forwards to explore what links us to the matrix of the Judaeo-Christian tradition from which Western cultural identity has evolved.
Their plural reflections raise searching questions about how we move from past to future - and about who 'we' are. What do the catastrophes of the twentieth century signify for hopes of progress? Can post - Enlightment humanism and its notion of human nature survive without faith? If the 'numinous magic global capitalism' is our own giant shadow cast abroad, does that shadow offer hope enough of a communal future? Has the modern, secularized West now outgrown its originating faith matrix?
Often controversial and sometimes visionary, these seven new essays ask: how do we tell - and rewrite - the story of the Common Era? Introduced by Paul Gifford, and discussed in a lively dialogic conclusion, they add their distinctive voices to a debate of profound and urgent topicality.

Paul Gifford is Buchanan Professor of French and Director of the Institute of European Cultural Identity Studies at the University of St Andrews. His publications inclide Reading Paul Valéry: Universe in Mind (Cambridge, 1999) and Subject Matters: Subject and Self in French Literature from Descartes to the Present (Rodopi, 1999). David Archard, Trevor A. Hart and Nigel Rapport all teach at the University of St Andrews.