Fr. 140.00

Confidence in Life - A Barthian Account of Procreation

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Spedizione di solito entro 3 a 5 settimane

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Zusatztext Matthew Lee Anderson’s Confidence in Life is a much-needed work focused on issues related to procreation, parenthood, and the family. Anderson’s engagement with recent philosophical work coupled with theology from Barth and others is a unique and helpful approach. Philosophers and theologians interested in issues surrounding procreation, pro-natalism, anti-natalism, and parenthood will find much of interest in this excellent book. Informationen zum Autor Matthew Lee Anderson is Assistant Professor in the Honors College at Baylor University, USA. Klappentext Confidence in Life offers a theologically-robust evaluation of the good of procreation, which emerges out of both careful interactions with contemporary analytic philosophy and a reconstructed reading of Karl Barth's doctrine of (pro)creation. While analytic moral philosophy has rarely been brought into close proximity to Barth's work, the conjunction underscores the deep difficulty of accounting for procreation's value within non-theological frameworks, and helps clarify what is distinctive and valuable about Barth's own moral reasoning on this subject. Though primarily staged as an intervention in Protestant moral theology, Confidence in Life's rehabilitation of the Virgin Mary's role in Barth's thought has promise for an ecumenical retrieval of the good of procreating within the economy of redemption-and its retrieval of honour as an indispensable aspect of Barth's theology will be of interest to Barth scholars and moral theologians alike. Vorwort Offers a theological account of procreation by reconstructing Karl Barth’s doctrine of (pro)creation and placing it in close dialogue with challenges to procreating from contemporary analytic moral philosophy. Zusammenfassung Confidence in Life offers a theologically-robust evaluation of the good of procreation, which emerges out of both careful interactions with contemporary analytic philosophy and a reconstructed reading of Karl Barth’s doctrine of (pro)creation. While analytic moral philosophy has rarely been brought into close proximity to Barth’s work, the conjunction underscores the deep difficulty of accounting for procreation’s value within non-theological frameworks, and helps clarify what is distinctive and valuable about Barth’s own moral reasoning on this subject. Though primarily staged as an intervention in Protestant moral theology, Confidence in Life’s rehabilitation of the Virgin Mary’s role in Barth’s thought has promise for an ecumenical retrieval of the good of procreating within the economy of redemption—and its retrieval of honour as an indispensable aspect of Barth’s theology will be of interest to Barth scholars and moral theologians alike. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction Chapter One: (Procreative) Neutrality is Not Enough Chapter Two: Parenthood and Procreative Bonds Chapter Three : The “Gift of Life”: Luck, the Involuntary, and Procreative Agency Chapter Four: Neither Optimism nor Pessimism: Karl Barth Among the Moral Philosophers Chapter Five: Birth Between the Times: Procreation in the Doctrine of Creation Chapter Six: Respect for Life as a Reason to Create Chapter Seven: Mary and the Eschatological Confirmation of Procreative Bonds Chapter Eight: Honour, Agency, and Reasons to Procreate Conclusion: The Meaning of Procreative FideismBibliographyIndex...

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