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This book explores aspects of William H. Poteat's philosophical anthropology, which proposes a post-critical alternative to the prevailing dualistic conception of the person and opens a path to recovery of the pre-reflective ontological ground of the person where our personhood can be recovered and re-appropriated.
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Recovering the personal: the philosophical anthropology of William H. Poteat / edited by Dale W. Cannon and Ronald L. Hall
2016, Lexington Books
in English
1498540945 9781498540940
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Table of Contents
Machine generated contents note:
pt. I
Philosophical Anthropology -- -- 1.
Refinding the Personal -- Ronald L. Hall -- 2.
Why Is the Personal so Important? -- Edward St. Clair -- 3.
Being Post-Critical -- Dale W. Cannon -- 4.
Critical Recollection -- Ronald L. Hall -- 5.
The Genealogy of Poteat's Philosophical Anthropology -- Bruce B. Lawrence -- 6.
The Primacy of Persons -- David W. Rutledge -- 7.
Dethroning Epistemology -- Ronald L. Hall -- pt. II
Theological Considerations -- -- 8.
Personhood and the Problematic of Christianity -- James W. Stines -- 9.
Incarnational Theology -- Elizabeth Newman -- 10.
Toward a Post-Critical Theology -- R. Melvin Keiser -- pt. III
Aesthetic Considerations -- -- 11.
Post-Critical Aesthetics -- Kieran Cashell -- 12.
Paul Cezanne and the Numinous Power of the Real -- William H. Poteat.
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (pages 205-210) and index.
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