This paper will examine Lacoste’s treatment of ethics, transcendence and theology, beginning first of all with the rela¬tionship between phenomenology and transcendence in La¬coste’s work, specifically the issue of perception. As we shall see, for Lacoste, every phenomenon has the same right to be wel¬comed and described as any other: God does not differ from things in the world—both Deus and res can be semper maior. It will then discuss how, with reference to liturgy, the phenom¬enology of silence could relate to divine transcendence, ethics, and intersubjectivity
This article dealt cursorily with developments in theology, philosophy and the sciences that have co...
This paper will seek firstly to understand Deleuze’s main challenges to phenomenology, particularly ...
The phenomenological science seeks to treat phenomena as pure possibilities. Everything that is dona...
This thesis aims to bring to wider attention the work of the Parisian theologian and philosopher Je...
Much of the contemporary discussion of religion seems to do away with the very possibility of revela...
The article first outlines Jean-Yves Lacoste’s phenomenological description of “liturgy”, i.e. the e...
The question of the gift has once again arisen as a question of debate for phenomenology and theolog...
In this paper I examine the relationship between phenomenology and metaphysics by reassessing the re...
This article aims to demonstrate, by means of a comparison with Lacoste’s proposal, that we can find...
This paper questions the post-Nietzschean, materialist assumption that divine transcendence is neces...
The last article devoted to Siewerth showed us the metaphysical relationship between God and the wor...
Phenomenology, understood as a philosophy of immanence, has had an ambiguous, uneasy relationship wi...
Despite the burgeoning field of Contemporary Continental Philosophy of Religion and the surfeit of l...
Culture and Transcendence: Shifting Religion and Spirituality in Philosophy, Theology, Art and Polit...
How can philosophy provide the evidence of its own relevance and of the own quest of relevance? And ...
This article dealt cursorily with developments in theology, philosophy and the sciences that have co...
This paper will seek firstly to understand Deleuze’s main challenges to phenomenology, particularly ...
The phenomenological science seeks to treat phenomena as pure possibilities. Everything that is dona...
This thesis aims to bring to wider attention the work of the Parisian theologian and philosopher Je...
Much of the contemporary discussion of religion seems to do away with the very possibility of revela...
The article first outlines Jean-Yves Lacoste’s phenomenological description of “liturgy”, i.e. the e...
The question of the gift has once again arisen as a question of debate for phenomenology and theolog...
In this paper I examine the relationship between phenomenology and metaphysics by reassessing the re...
This article aims to demonstrate, by means of a comparison with Lacoste’s proposal, that we can find...
This paper questions the post-Nietzschean, materialist assumption that divine transcendence is neces...
The last article devoted to Siewerth showed us the metaphysical relationship between God and the wor...
Phenomenology, understood as a philosophy of immanence, has had an ambiguous, uneasy relationship wi...
Despite the burgeoning field of Contemporary Continental Philosophy of Religion and the surfeit of l...
Culture and Transcendence: Shifting Religion and Spirituality in Philosophy, Theology, Art and Polit...
How can philosophy provide the evidence of its own relevance and of the own quest of relevance? And ...
This article dealt cursorily with developments in theology, philosophy and the sciences that have co...
This paper will seek firstly to understand Deleuze’s main challenges to phenomenology, particularly ...
The phenomenological science seeks to treat phenomena as pure possibilities. Everything that is dona...