Essays in Postfoundationalist Theology
This is a print on demand book and is therefore non- returnable.

How and why do some of us hang on to religious faith amid the confusion of this postmodern age? How can we speak of the certainty of faith or of passionate commitments and deep convictions in a postmodern context that celebrates cultural and religious pluralism? Can Christian theology ever really claim to join this postmodern conversation without retreating to an esoteric world of private, insular knowledge claims? Finally, how does theological reflection relate to other modes of intellectual inquiry, and especially to scientific knowledge, which very often goes unchallenged as the ultimate paradigm of human rationality in our times?

This collection of essays in philosophical theology boldly addresses many of the challenges faced by Christian theology in the context of contemporary postmodern thought. Through a series of profound discussions of theology in relation to epistemology, methodology, and science, J. Wentzel van Huyssteen presses the case for a "postfoundationalist theology" as a viable third option beyond the extremes of foundationalism and nonfoundationalism.

The essays in Part 1 explore the dynamics involved when a philosophical theologian enters the interdisciplinary conversation with strong personal convictions. In the process, van Huyssteen critically engages with the work of Wolfhart Pennenberg, Nancey Murphy, and Jerome Stone. Part 2 focuses on the need for Christian theology to break out of an insularity that is concerned only with its own contemporary intellectual world. Part 3, which begins in dialogue with Gerd Theissen, turns to some of the important issues in the current theology-and-science dialogue as concrete examples of interdisciplinarity in postfoundationalist theology.

Handling abstract themes in a remarkably clear and concise way, this volume sets forth the convincing argument that only a truly accessible and philosophically credible notion of interdisciplinarity will be able to pave the way for a plausible public theology that can play an important intellectual role in our fragmented contemporary culture.
1102012189
Essays in Postfoundationalist Theology
This is a print on demand book and is therefore non- returnable.

How and why do some of us hang on to religious faith amid the confusion of this postmodern age? How can we speak of the certainty of faith or of passionate commitments and deep convictions in a postmodern context that celebrates cultural and religious pluralism? Can Christian theology ever really claim to join this postmodern conversation without retreating to an esoteric world of private, insular knowledge claims? Finally, how does theological reflection relate to other modes of intellectual inquiry, and especially to scientific knowledge, which very often goes unchallenged as the ultimate paradigm of human rationality in our times?

This collection of essays in philosophical theology boldly addresses many of the challenges faced by Christian theology in the context of contemporary postmodern thought. Through a series of profound discussions of theology in relation to epistemology, methodology, and science, J. Wentzel van Huyssteen presses the case for a "postfoundationalist theology" as a viable third option beyond the extremes of foundationalism and nonfoundationalism.

The essays in Part 1 explore the dynamics involved when a philosophical theologian enters the interdisciplinary conversation with strong personal convictions. In the process, van Huyssteen critically engages with the work of Wolfhart Pennenberg, Nancey Murphy, and Jerome Stone. Part 2 focuses on the need for Christian theology to break out of an insularity that is concerned only with its own contemporary intellectual world. Part 3, which begins in dialogue with Gerd Theissen, turns to some of the important issues in the current theology-and-science dialogue as concrete examples of interdisciplinarity in postfoundationalist theology.

Handling abstract themes in a remarkably clear and concise way, this volume sets forth the convincing argument that only a truly accessible and philosophically credible notion of interdisciplinarity will be able to pave the way for a plausible public theology that can play an important intellectual role in our fragmented contemporary culture.
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Essays in Postfoundationalist Theology

Essays in Postfoundationalist Theology

Essays in Postfoundationalist Theology

Essays in Postfoundationalist Theology

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Overview

This is a print on demand book and is therefore non- returnable.

How and why do some of us hang on to religious faith amid the confusion of this postmodern age? How can we speak of the certainty of faith or of passionate commitments and deep convictions in a postmodern context that celebrates cultural and religious pluralism? Can Christian theology ever really claim to join this postmodern conversation without retreating to an esoteric world of private, insular knowledge claims? Finally, how does theological reflection relate to other modes of intellectual inquiry, and especially to scientific knowledge, which very often goes unchallenged as the ultimate paradigm of human rationality in our times?

This collection of essays in philosophical theology boldly addresses many of the challenges faced by Christian theology in the context of contemporary postmodern thought. Through a series of profound discussions of theology in relation to epistemology, methodology, and science, J. Wentzel van Huyssteen presses the case for a "postfoundationalist theology" as a viable third option beyond the extremes of foundationalism and nonfoundationalism.

The essays in Part 1 explore the dynamics involved when a philosophical theologian enters the interdisciplinary conversation with strong personal convictions. In the process, van Huyssteen critically engages with the work of Wolfhart Pennenberg, Nancey Murphy, and Jerome Stone. Part 2 focuses on the need for Christian theology to break out of an insularity that is concerned only with its own contemporary intellectual world. Part 3, which begins in dialogue with Gerd Theissen, turns to some of the important issues in the current theology-and-science dialogue as concrete examples of interdisciplinarity in postfoundationalist theology.

Handling abstract themes in a remarkably clear and concise way, this volume sets forth the convincing argument that only a truly accessible and philosophically credible notion of interdisciplinarity will be able to pave the way for a plausible public theology that can play an important intellectual role in our fragmented contemporary culture.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780802843098
Publisher: Eerdmans, William B. Publishing Company
Publication date: 10/04/2005
Pages: 295
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.67(d)

About the Author

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.

Table of Contents

    PART 1: THEOLOGY AND EPISTEMOLOGY

  1. Is Rational Judgment Always a Responsible Choice? Some Reflections on Theology and Interdisciplinarity
  2. Critical Realism and God: Can There Be Faith after Foundationalism?
  3. Truth and Commitment in Theology and Science: An Appraisal of Wolfhart Pannenberg's Perspective
  4. Is the Postmodernist Always a Postfoundationalist? Nancey Murphy's Lakatosian Model for Theology
  5. The Realist Challenge in Postmodern Theology: Religious Experience in Jerome Stone's Neo-Naturalism
  6. PART 2: THEOLOGY AND METHODOLOGY

  7. Systematic Theology and Philosophy of Science: The Need for Methodological and Theoretical Clarity in Theology
  8. The Realism of the Text: A Perspective on Biblical Authority
  9. Experience and Explanation: The Justification of Cognitive Claims in Theology
  10. Narrative Theology: An Adequate Paradigm for Theological Reflection?
  11. PART 3: THEOLOGY AND SCIENCE

  12. Evolution, Knowledge, and Faith: Gerd Theissen and the Credibility of Theology
  13. Theology and Science: The Quest for a New Apologetics
  14. The Shaping of Rationality in Science and Religion
  15. Is There a Postmodern Challenge in Theology and Science?
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