This essay examines the interplay of politics, science and theology in the debates over ‘Protestant freedom’ that took place in mid-nineteenth century Germany. It begins by tracing how rival factions of conservative, liberal, and radical clergy sought to mobilize the tradition of ‘Protestant Freedom’ during the period of ferment preceding the Revolution of 1848. The essay then turns to the 1860s to explore how church liberals argued for the compatibility of natural science and Protestantism. The final section picks up debates among radicals, who, on the eve of German unification in 1870, were divided over the question of whether the conscience, as defined in the Lutheran tradition, was compatible with scientific naturalism
The great sociologist, R.K. Merton, presented in 1938 a study concerning the establishment of scienc...
This essay argues that today's dominant understanding of secularization—as an epochal transition fro...
This essay argues that Hössli’s 1836/8 apology for male-male love, Eros, grows out of early nineteen...
This essay examines the interplay of politics, science and theology in the debates over ‘Protestant ...
This piece introduces a special issue of Global Intellectual History, on the theme of Theology and ...
This dissertation deals with the political thought of three authors of the Vormärz era in Germany: t...
At the end of the nineteenth century, many German church leaders viewed popular natural science and ...
Theology must be involved in interdisciplinary dialogue with the sciences if it is to fulfill adequa...
When the German translation of Darwin’s On the Origin of Species was published in 1860, it intensifi...
The understanding of freedom from a Protestant point of view is out¬lined in Luther’s writing “On th...
Ever since the 1934 debate between Karl Barth and Emil Brunner, the possibility and status of natura...
The Leipzig Debate of 1519, which was attended by prominent theologians Martin Luther, Andreas Karls...
Theology must be involved in interdisciplinary dialogue with the sciences if it is to fulfill adequa...
This paper aims to examine political, ecclesiastic, and theological changes in Switzerland during th...
Politicised inwardness. Protestantism and culture in Germany in the 19th century. This contributio...
The great sociologist, R.K. Merton, presented in 1938 a study concerning the establishment of scienc...
This essay argues that today's dominant understanding of secularization—as an epochal transition fro...
This essay argues that Hössli’s 1836/8 apology for male-male love, Eros, grows out of early nineteen...
This essay examines the interplay of politics, science and theology in the debates over ‘Protestant ...
This piece introduces a special issue of Global Intellectual History, on the theme of Theology and ...
This dissertation deals with the political thought of three authors of the Vormärz era in Germany: t...
At the end of the nineteenth century, many German church leaders viewed popular natural science and ...
Theology must be involved in interdisciplinary dialogue with the sciences if it is to fulfill adequa...
When the German translation of Darwin’s On the Origin of Species was published in 1860, it intensifi...
The understanding of freedom from a Protestant point of view is out¬lined in Luther’s writing “On th...
Ever since the 1934 debate between Karl Barth and Emil Brunner, the possibility and status of natura...
The Leipzig Debate of 1519, which was attended by prominent theologians Martin Luther, Andreas Karls...
Theology must be involved in interdisciplinary dialogue with the sciences if it is to fulfill adequa...
This paper aims to examine political, ecclesiastic, and theological changes in Switzerland during th...
Politicised inwardness. Protestantism and culture in Germany in the 19th century. This contributio...
The great sociologist, R.K. Merton, presented in 1938 a study concerning the establishment of scienc...
This essay argues that today's dominant understanding of secularization—as an epochal transition fro...
This essay argues that Hössli’s 1836/8 apology for male-male love, Eros, grows out of early nineteen...