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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/1177856172

Deleuze and Theology

What can atheologian do with Deleuze? While using philosophy as a resource for theologyis nothing new, Gilles Deleuze (1925-1995) presents a kind of limit-case forsuch a theological appropriation of philosophy: a thoroughly "modern"philosophy that would seem to be fundamentally hostile to Christian theology?aphilosophy of atheistic immanence with an essentially chaotic vision of theworld. Nonetheless, Deleuze's philosophy can generate many potentialintersections with theology opening onto a field of configurations: a fractiousmiddle between radical Deleuzian theologies that would think through.

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http://schema.org/description

  • "What can a<br/>theologian do with Deleuze? While using philosophy as a resource for theology<br/>is nothing new, Gilles Deleuze (1925-1995) presents a kind of limit-case for<br/>such a theological appropriation of philosophy: a thoroughly "modern"<br/>philosophy that would seem to be fundamentally hostile to Christian theology-a<br/>philosophy of atheistic immanence with an essentially chaotic vision of the<br/>world. Nonetheless, Deleuze's philosophy can generate many potential<br/>intersections with theology opening onto a field of configurations: a fractious<br/>middle between radical Deleuzian theologies that would think through theology<br/>and reinterpret it from the perspective of some version of Deleuzian philosophy<br/>and other theologies that would seek to learn from and respond to Deleuze from<br/>the perspective of confessional theology-to take from the encounter with<br/>Deleuze an opportunity to clarify and reform an orthodox Christian<br/>self-understanding."
  • "What can atheologian do with Deleuze? While using philosophy as a resource for theologyis nothing new, Gilles Deleuze (1925-1995) presents a kind of limit-case forsuch a theological appropriation of philosophy: a thoroughly "modern"philosophy that would seem to be fundamentally hostile to Christian theology?aphilosophy of atheistic immanence with an essentially chaotic vision of theworld. Nonetheless, Deleuze's philosophy can generate many potentialintersections with theology opening onto a field of configurations: a fractiousmiddle between radical Deleuzian theologies that would think through."@en

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Electronic books"
  • "Electronic books"@en
  • "Criticism, interpretation, etc"

http://schema.org/name

  • "Deleuze and Theology"
  • "Deleuze and Theology"@en
  • "Deleuze and theology"@en
  • "Deleuze and theology"