In this article I explore how a philosophical conception of love may be used to draw debate on the death of God beyond the binary opposition between theology and philosophy through a comparative study of the work of Jean-Luc Marion and Jean-Luc Nancy. Although Marion’s reading of love—in both its theological and phenomenological guises—proposes an innovative phrasing of a nonmetaphysical notion of divinity, I argue that it is ultimately unable to maintain its coherence in nominal discourse due to Marion’s insistence on keeping love and being separate. In contrast, through his unique thinking on ontology, Nancy’s philosophy allows us to reposition love at the heart of being, from whence it may serve as a means of disrupting the very princip...
Degree awarded: Ph.D. Systematic Theology. The Catholic University of AmericaThis dissertation can b...
Love is one of the very basic emotions felt by man and is universal in nature. Although there are a ...
This article aims to be a confrontation with Nancy’s “deconstruction of Christianity”. For Nancy to ...
Marion obliquely suggests that we return to religion when we think through and struggle with those t...
This article aims to explore the philosophical approach to faith after deconstruction as manifested ...
The concept of love has historically been somewhat of an embarrassment for Philosophy because it rem...
Philosophy of religion has traditionally privileged epistemic questions about God (Does God exist? C...
The question posed by this dissertation is what role, if any, does religion continue to play in unde...
What can modern metaphysics say of God? Not much—if we accept the argument of Jean-Luc Marion, the i...
The note aims at making an appraisal of Je an- Luc M arion' s position on love as the first name of ...
The work of the French philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy shares with the thinkers of the ‘theological turn ...
Existentialism centres reflection upon the bodily existence of the human person. Generally, however,...
This dissertation is a study of the origins and development of the French philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy...
In the present paper, I draw upon my book Lyotard and Theology to discuss the way in which the Chris...
Assisted by Lyotard’s postmodern critical philosophy of difference, I analyse Christianity as the ma...
Degree awarded: Ph.D. Systematic Theology. The Catholic University of AmericaThis dissertation can b...
Love is one of the very basic emotions felt by man and is universal in nature. Although there are a ...
This article aims to be a confrontation with Nancy’s “deconstruction of Christianity”. For Nancy to ...
Marion obliquely suggests that we return to religion when we think through and struggle with those t...
This article aims to explore the philosophical approach to faith after deconstruction as manifested ...
The concept of love has historically been somewhat of an embarrassment for Philosophy because it rem...
Philosophy of religion has traditionally privileged epistemic questions about God (Does God exist? C...
The question posed by this dissertation is what role, if any, does religion continue to play in unde...
What can modern metaphysics say of God? Not much—if we accept the argument of Jean-Luc Marion, the i...
The note aims at making an appraisal of Je an- Luc M arion' s position on love as the first name of ...
The work of the French philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy shares with the thinkers of the ‘theological turn ...
Existentialism centres reflection upon the bodily existence of the human person. Generally, however,...
This dissertation is a study of the origins and development of the French philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy...
In the present paper, I draw upon my book Lyotard and Theology to discuss the way in which the Chris...
Assisted by Lyotard’s postmodern critical philosophy of difference, I analyse Christianity as the ma...
Degree awarded: Ph.D. Systematic Theology. The Catholic University of AmericaThis dissertation can b...
Love is one of the very basic emotions felt by man and is universal in nature. Although there are a ...
This article aims to be a confrontation with Nancy’s “deconstruction of Christianity”. For Nancy to ...