En savoir plus
Table des matières
Acknowledgements
1. Re-Reading Bavinck's Theological Epistemology
2. Bavinck's Organicism - God, Anthropology and Revelation
3. Organism and Wetenschap - The Structure of Bavinck's Epistemology
4. Between Aquinas and Kuyper
5. Bavinck, Thomas Reid, the 'Gap' and the Question of Subjects and Objects
6. The Absolute and the Organic - Bavinck and Eduard von Hartmann
7. Revelation, the Unconscious, Reason and Feeling
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
A propos de l'auteur
Nathaniel Gray Sutanto is Assistant Professor of Systematic Theology at Reformed Theological Seminary, Washington, USA. He is the author of God and Knowledge: Herman Bavinck’s Theological Epistemology (T&T Clark, 2020).
Résumé
Nathaniel Gray Sutanto offers a fresh reading of Herman Bavinck’s theological epistemology, and argues that his Trinitarian and organic worldview utilizes an extensive range of sources. Sutanto unfolds Bavinck’s understanding of what he considered to be the two most important aspects of epistemology: the character of the sciences and the correspondence between subjects and objects. Writing at the heels of the European debates in the 19th and 20th century concerning theology’s place in the academy, and rooted in historic Christian teachings, Sutanto demonstrates how Bavinck’s argument remains fresh and provocative.
This volume explores archival material and peripheral works translated for the first time in English. The author re-reads several key concepts, ranging from Organicism to the Absolute, and relates Bavinck’s work to Thomas Aquinas, Eduard von Hartmann, and other thinkers. Sutanto applies this reading to current debates on the relationship between theology and philosophy, nature and grace, and the nature of knowing; and in doing so provides students and scholars with fresh methods of considering Orthodox and modern forms of thought, and their connection with each other.
Préface
Reconsiders the pre-existing paradigms of interpretation on Herman Bavinck's theological epistemology.
Texte suppl.
The principle of unity in diversity was a vital organizing principle in Herman Bavinck’s theology. Here Nathaniel Gray Sutanto skilfully explores its epistemological application to the subjective act of knowing and to the unity of the sciences as an organic whole. This is an important addition to the burgeoning secondary literature on Bavinck’s work.