Fr. 149.00

Suffering and Evil in Nature - Comparative Responses From Ecstatic Naturalism and Healing Cultures

English · Hardback

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Description

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This edited collection represents an ongoing conversation for bringing healing cultures into suffering and evil. The pluralistic perspectives emerge from the creativity of this unique community of interpreters.

List of contents










Foreword
Robert S. Corrington
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Joseph E. Harroff and Jea Sophia Oh

Part 1: A Deep Opening of Nothingness: Some Metaphysical Resoundings
1. Providence and Providingness: On Platonic and Ecstatic Naturalist Good, Evil, and Infinity
Marilynn Lawrence
2. The Experience of Values and the Possibility of Ordinal Phenomenology in Corrington's Deep Pantheism
James Edward Hackett
3. Dwelling with the Deep Ones: Lovecraftian Horror and the Selving Process
Thomas Millary
Part 2: Facing Suffering and Violence: Ecstatic Difference and Educational Healing
4. On Being Sunk?
Desmond Coleman
5. Racism, Religious Education and Transformation
Moon Son and Ji Young Park
6. A Phenomenological Study of Feminist Political Consciousness
Susan Erck

Part 3: Ecological World Horizons: Comparative Philosophy and Relational Responding
7. Recapturing World-Loyalty: A Relational Response to Ecological Violence
Katelynn E. Carver
8. Fecundity and Healing of the Great Mother Reading Corrington's Nature and Nothingness via Yin-Yang Thinking
Jea Sophia Oh
Part 4: Nurturing Nature and Posthumanism
9. Evil as Human Resistance to the Indifferent Force of the Primal Nature: An Essay on Story-Telling Animals
Iljoon Park
10. The Posthuman and an Advaya Dialectic of Sacrifice
Ick-Sang Shin
11. Education for the Symbiosis of Humans and Machines in a Post-Human Age
Eunkyoung Lee

Part 5: (A)theodicy through the Anthropocene
12. Selving in a Dangerous World: William James, Buddhism, and Ecstatic Naturalism
Jonathan Weidenbaum
13. Redemptive Suffering with Tianming ¿¿: An Ecstatically Naturalist Reading of Sacred Selving in Confucian Ethics
Joseph Harroff
14. We Have Met the Enemy, and He is Us: The Nature of Evil and the Evil of Nature in the Anthropocene
Robert King


About the author










Edited by Joseph E. Harroff and Jea Sophia Oh - Foreword by Robert S. Corrington - Contributions by Katelynn E. Carver; Desmond Coleman; Susan Erck; J. Edward Hackett; Joseph E. Harroff; Robert King; Marilynn Lawrence; Eunkyoung Lee; Thomas Millary; Jea S

Summary

This edited collection represents an ongoing conversation for bringing healing cultures into suffering and evil. The pluralistic perspectives emerge from the creativity of this unique community of interpreters.

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