George Grant and the theology of the cross : the Christian foundations of his thought /
Beneath the philosophical, social, political, ethical, national, and moral issues that Grant tackled throughout his career was a fundamental concern with theodicy - the problem of faith in God in a world of conflict, suffering, and tragedy.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Toronto, Ont. :
University of Toronto Press,
©2001.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- The Great Discovery
- Grant's Roots and Formative Years
- War and 'Conversion'
- Post-war Writings
- Grant's Study of Theology and Philosophy
- The Theology of the Cross: Its Origins, Meaning, and Significance
- The Origins and Meaning of the 'Theology of the Cross'
- The Significance of the Theology of the Cross for Grant
- Philosophy in the Mass Age
- The Mass Society: What It is and How It Came to Be
- The Consequences of the Mass Society on Human Life: Simone Weil and Existentialism
- Simone Weil's Analysis of Force and Affliction
- Jean-Paul Sartre and Existentialism: The Tragic Vision of Life
- Western Liberalism and the Mass Society: The Theology of Glory in North America
- Education, Religion, and Mental Health in the Mass Society
- Modern Liberalism-Hegel, Liberal Humanism, Marxism
- The Struggle toward a Theology of the Cross for the Mass Age: Weil versus Hegel
- The Purpose of Philosophy in the Mass Society
- Weil's Vision of the Good
- Grant's Earliest Encounters with Weil and the Insights Arising Therefrom
- Loving the World Concretely
- The Growing Influence of Weil and the Allure of Hegel
- Intimations of Deprivation
- A Deepening of Perspective
- The Darkness of the Technological Society: Its Nature and Essence
- Jacques Ellul: The Technological Society 'As It Is'
- Leo Strauss: The Irreconcilability of Ancient and Modern Visions of Society
- Philip Sherrard: The Corruption within Western Civilization As a Whole.