Philosophy and the Turn to Religion / Hent de Vries.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Book collections on Project MUSEPublisher: Baltimore, Md. : Johns Hopkins University Press, 2019Manufacturer: Baltimore, Md. : Project MUSE, 2020Copyright date: ©2019Description: 1 online resource (498 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781421437415
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Online resources:
Contents:
Revealing Revelations -- Two Misreadings -- Mikel Dufrenne's Plea for a Nontheological Philosophy -- Jean-Luc Marion's Heterology of Donation -- The Example Par Excellence -- Hypertheology -- The Unavoidable -- Yet Another "Non-Theo-Anthropological Otherness" -- Thearchy and Beyond -- The Movement Upward -- Angelus Silesius's uber -- Pseudo-Dionysius's hyper -- Emmanuel Levinas's autrement -- Jean-Luc Marion's Analogy of Hierarchy -- The Affirmative First -- The Diacritical Moment of Prayer -- Analytical Confirmations -- Formal Indications -- Heidegger and Insubordination -- Shortcuts -- Reading St. Paul Methodically -- Eschatology, the kaipos, and the [pi]apovsia -- "As Though It Were Not" -- Formal Indication: The Very Idea -- Fiat Flux -- On Becoming a Mystery to Oneself -- "Religion qua Religion": Heidegger's Humanism -- Transcendental Historicity -- The Generous Repetition -- Save the Name -- The Impossibility of Possibility -- The Death of the Other -- The Aporetic as Such -- Heidegger's Possibilism -- Virtual Debates -- The Kenosis of Discourse -- Angelus Silesius's Cherubinic Wanderer -- Save ... the Name -- Revealing Revelations Once More -- The Confessional Mode -- Apocalyptics and Enlightenment -- Idolatry and Hyperphysics -- Kant and Kafka -- The Revelation of John and the Ends of Philosophy -- Speech Tact -- Vigilance and the Ellipses of Enlightenment.
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The text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivatives 4.0 International License.

Open access edition supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities / Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Humanities Open Book Program.

Originally published as Johns Hopkins Press in 1999.

Revealing Revelations -- Two Misreadings -- Mikel Dufrenne's Plea for a Nontheological Philosophy -- Jean-Luc Marion's Heterology of Donation -- The Example Par Excellence -- Hypertheology -- The Unavoidable -- Yet Another "Non-Theo-Anthropological Otherness" -- Thearchy and Beyond -- The Movement Upward -- Angelus Silesius's uber -- Pseudo-Dionysius's hyper -- Emmanuel Levinas's autrement -- Jean-Luc Marion's Analogy of Hierarchy -- The Affirmative First -- The Diacritical Moment of Prayer -- Analytical Confirmations -- Formal Indications -- Heidegger and Insubordination -- Shortcuts -- Reading St. Paul Methodically -- Eschatology, the kaipos, and the [pi]apovsia -- "As Though It Were Not" -- Formal Indication: The Very Idea -- Fiat Flux -- On Becoming a Mystery to Oneself -- "Religion qua Religion": Heidegger's Humanism -- Transcendental Historicity -- The Generous Repetition -- Save the Name -- The Impossibility of Possibility -- The Death of the Other -- The Aporetic as Such -- Heidegger's Possibilism -- Virtual Debates -- The Kenosis of Discourse -- Angelus Silesius's Cherubinic Wanderer -- Save ... the Name -- Revealing Revelations Once More -- The Confessional Mode -- Apocalyptics and Enlightenment -- Idolatry and Hyperphysics -- Kant and Kafka -- The Revelation of John and the Ends of Philosophy -- Speech Tact -- Vigilance and the Ellipses of Enlightenment.

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