- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > 英文書
- > Philosophy
Full Description
What did Jesus mean by the expression, the Kingdom of God? As an answer, Kevin Hart sketches a "phenomenology of the Christ" that explores the unique way Jesus performs phenomenology. According to Hart, philosophers and theologians continually reinterpret Jesus's teaching of the Kingdom so that there are effectively many Kingdoms of God. Working in, while also displacing, a tradition inaugurated by Husserl and continued by philosophers such as Heidegger, Marion, and Lacoste, Hart puts forward a new phenomenology of religion that claims that ethics and religion are not always unified or continuous.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I. Inward Life
1. In Priora Extendens Me: Confessions, IX. x. 23-25
2. Inward Life: On Fichte and Henry
Part II. Aspects of the Kingdom
3. "An Infinite Relation to God": Hegel and Beyond
4. Homo Humanus: Kierkegaard on Loving in the World with Constant Reference to Aquinas
5. Bonhoeffer's Religious Clothes
Part III. Manifestations
6. The Manifestation of the Father
7. Phenomenology of the Christ
8. Notes Toward a Supreme Phenomenology
Part IV. Traces
9. Kingdoms of God: On Kant and Derrida
10. Presence
11. Four or Five Words in Derrida
Part V. Coda
12. Guilty Forgiveness
13. Our Father
Notes
Index