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Nietzsche and Theology
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Author_David Deane
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Catherine Pickstock
christological
Christological Anthropology
Differential Ontology
doctrine of reconciliation
Double Predestination
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Fallen Man
God's Election
God’s Election
Man Jesus
Moral Questioning
Nietzsche's Engagement
Nietzsche's Understanding
Nietzsche's Writing
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Nietzschean influence on Christian anthropology
Nietzschean Ontology
Nietzschean Thought
Nietzschean Tradition
Nietzsche’s Engagement
Nietzsche’s Understanding
Nietzsche’s Writing
Noetic Content
ontology
ontology of violence
orthodoxy
radical
radical orthodoxy
Royal Man
Secular Reason
semiotics of religion
sin and fallenness
thought
understanding
Product details
- ISBN 9780754657675
- Weight: 453g
- Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
- Publication Date: 16 Oct 2006
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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Theology has always viewed Nietzschean thought with a sideways glance, never quite sure what to make of it. Where serious engagement has occurred it has tended to either reject such thought outright or to accept it to such an extent that it loses its identity as Christian theology. This book outlines a model for incorporating Nietzschean thought within the structures of a wholly traditional Christological anthropology. What is perhaps even more significant is what shows up in Christological anthropology under this Nietzschean light. Using Nietzschean concepts a whole new lexicon is opened up for understanding and articulating traditional accounts of sin and fallenness, accounts which modern theology has often lacked the categories to articulate. The book culminates in a doctrine of reconciliation which is given urgency and coherence precisely through such reinvigoration of traditional accounts using Nietzschean thought.
David Deane is Associate Theologian in Residence at John XXIII University Center and Lecturer in Religious Studies at Colorado State University, USA
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