Alone in the World?

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Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2006/04/12 - 347 ページ
In Alone in the World? -- first given as the 2004 Gifford Lectures at the University of Edinburgh -- J. Wentzel van Huyssteen develops the interdisciplinary dialogue that he set out in The Shaping of Rationality (1999), applying this methodology to the uncharted waters between theological anthropology and paleoanthropology.

Among other things, van Huyssteen argues that scientific notions of human uniqueness help us to ground theological notions of human distinctiveness in flesh-and-blood, embodied experiences and protect us from overly complex theological abstractions regarding the "image of God." Focusing on the interdisciplinary problem of human origins and distinctiveness, van Huyssteen accesses the origins of the embodied human mind through the spectacular prehistoric cave paintings of western Europe, fifteen of which are reproduced in color in this volume.

Boldly connecting the widely separated fields of Christian theology and paleoanthropology through careful interdisciplinary reflection, Alone in the World? will encourage sustained investigation into the question of human uniqueness.

 

目次

Human Uniqueness as an Interdisciplinary Problem?
10
Interdisciplinarity in Theology and Science
19
Tradition and Communicative Understanding
33
Interdisciplinarity and Human Uniqueness
43
Conclusion
48
Human Uniqueness and Cognitive Evolution
54
Human Distinctiveness in Paleontology
56
A Human Uniqueness as a Moral Issue
56
Human Uniqueness and Paleoanthropology
80
Imagination and Prehistoric Art
80
Human Imagination and Religious Awareness
83
Conclusion
92
Human Uniqueness and Symbolization
97
Human Uniqueness and Language
101
Human Uniqueness and the Symbolic Mind
113
A Handprints in the Deep Caves Plates 1and 2
131

B Human Uniqueness and Hominid Evolution
56
Charles Darwin on Human Uniqueness
56
Evolutionary Epistemology and Human Uniqueness
56
A Evolutionary Epistemology as Embodied Epistemology
56
B Evolutionary Epistemology and Religion
56
Conclusion
59
Human Uniqueness and the Image of God
64
Human Uniqueness and the History of the Imago Dei
69
Contemporary Interpretations of the Imago Dei
80
The Imago Dei as Embodied Self
80
Conclusion
80
Human Uniqueness and Human Origins
80
B The Ithyphallic Bird Man from the Shaft in Lascaux Plate 11
132
C The Wounded Men from Cougnac and PechMerle Plates 3 and 4
134
Human Uniqueness and Religious Imagination
141
Conclusion
147
Human Uniqueness in Science and Theology
151
Human Uniqueness and Embodiment
155
Human Uniqueness in the Jewish Tradition
172
Human Uniqueness and the Limits of Interdisciplinarity
179
Conclusion
187
Bibliography
206
Index
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著者について (2006)

J. Wentzel van Huyssteen (1942-2022) was the James I. McCord Professor of Theology and Science at Princeton Theological Seminary. In 2003, he became the first South African and the first Princeton Seminary professor to deliver the prestigious Gifford Lectures.

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