Givenness and God: Questions of Jean-Luc Marion (Perspectives in Continental Philosophy) (NO. 43)
معرفی کتاب «Givenness and God: Questions of Jean-Luc Marion (Perspectives in Continental Philosophy) (NO. 43)» نوشتهٔ Leask, Ian Graham; Marion, Jean-Luc; Marion, Jean-Luc; Cassidy, Eoin G، منتشرشده توسط نشر Fordham University Press در سال 2005. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
After the subject and beyond Heideggerian ontology,Marion suggests, there is the sheer givenness ofphenomena without condition. In theology, this liberationmeans rethinking God in terms of phenomena such aslove, gift, and excess. In addition to an important essayby Marion, The Reason of the Gift, and a dialoguebetween Marion and Richard Kearney, this book containsstimulating essays by ten other contributors: Lilian Alweiss,Eoin Cassidy, Mark Dooley, Brian Elliott, Ian Leask,Shane Mackinlay, Derek Morrow, John O'Donohue,Joseph S. O'Leary, and Felix à Murchadha. After the subject and beyond Heideggerian ontology, Marion suggests, there is the givenness of phenomena without condition. In theology, this liberation means rethinking God in terms of phenomena such as love, gift, and excess. In addition to an important essay by Marion, The Reason of the Gift, and a dialogue between Marion and Richard Kearney, this book contains stimulating essays by ten other contributors: Lilian Alweiss, Eoin Cassidy, Mark Dooley, Brian Elliott, Ian Leask, Shane Mackinlay, Derek Morrow, John O'Donohue, Joseph S. O'Leary, and Felix à Murchadha
After the subject and beyond Heideggerian ontology,Marion suggests, there is the sheer givenness ofphenomena without condition. In theology, this liberationmeans rethinking God in terms of phenomena such aslove, gift, and excess. In addition to an important essayby Marion, The Reason of the Gift, and a dialoguebetween Marion and Richard Kearney, this book containsstimulating essays by ten other contributors: Lilian Alweiss,Eoin Cassidy, Mark Dooley, Brian Elliott, Ian Leask,Shane Mackinlay, Derek Morrow, John O'Donohue,Joseph S. O'Leary, and Felix à Murchadha. After the subject and beyond Heideggerian ontology, Marion suggests, there is the givenness of phenomena without condition. In theology, this liberation means rethinking God in terms of phenomena such as love, gift, and excess. In addition to an important essay by Marion, The Reason of the Gift, and a dialogue between Marion and Richard Kearney, this book contains stimulating essays by ten other contributors: Lilian Alweiss, Eoin Cassidy, Mark Dooley, Brian Elliott, Ian Leask, Shane Mackinlay, Derek Morrow, John O'Donohue, Joseph S. O'Leary, and Felix à Murchadha. Givenness and God 5 Contents 7 Acknowledgments 9 Abbreviations 11 Foreword 15 Introduction 19 Part I: Marion on Descartes, Husserl, and Heidegger 27 Chapter 1: The Conceptual Idolatry of Descartes’s Gray Ontology 29 Chapter 2: I Am, I Exist 55 Chapter 3: Hubris and Humility 65 Chapter 4: Glory, Idolatry, Kairos 87 Chapter 5: Reduced Phenomena and Unreserved Debts in Marion’s Reading of Heidegger 105 Part II: Marion: Gift and Reception 117 Chapter 6: The Reason of the Gift 119 Chapter 7: The Gift 153 Chapter 8: Phenomenality in the Middle 185 Chapter 9: The Dative Subject (and the ‘‘Principle of Principles’’) 200 Chapter 10: Marion’s Ambition of Transcendence 208 Part III: Marion and Beyond 217 Chapter 11: Le phénoméne érotique: Augustinian Resonances in Marion’s Phenomenology of Love 219 Chapter 12: Hermeneutics of the Possible God 238 Chapter 13: Giving More 261 Chapter 14: The Absent Threshold: An Eckhartian Afterword 276 Notes 303 Contributors 359 Index 363 Other Books in Fordham's Perspectives in Continental Philosophy Series 365 Foreword / Dermot A. Lane -- Introduction / Ian Leask And Eoin Cassidy -- 1. The Conceptual Idolatry Of Descartes's Gray Ontology : An Epistemology Without Being / Derek J. Morrow -- 2. I Am, I Exist / Lilian Alweiss -- 3. Hubris And Humility : Husserl's Reduction And Givenness / Timothy Mooney -- 4. Glory, Idolatry, Kairos : Revelation And The Ontological Difference In Marion / Felix O Murchadha -- 5. Reduced Phenomena And Unreserved Debts In Marion's Reading Of Heidegger / Brian Elliott -- 6. The Reason Of The Gift / Jean-luc Marion -- 7. The Gift : A Trojan Horse In The Citadel Of Phenomenology? / Joseph S. O'leary -- 8. Phenomenality In The Middle : Marion, Romana, And The Hermeneutics Of The Event / Shane Mackinlay. Edited By Ian Leask And Eoin Cassidy. Includes Bibliographical References (p. 285-339) And Index. Annotation After the subject and beyond Heideggerian ontology, Marion suggests, there is the sheer givenness of phenomena without condition. In theology, this liberation means rethinking God in terms of phenomena such as love, gift, and excess. In addition to an important essay by Marion, "The Reason of the Gift," and a dialogue between Marion and Richard Kearney, this book contains stimulating essays by ten other contributors: Lilian Alweiss, Eoin Cassidy, Mark Dooley, Brian Elliott, Ian Leask, Shane Mackinlay, Derek Morrow, John O'Donohue, Joseph S. O'Leary, and Felix O Murchadha "Is phenomenology in jeopardy? Will the phenomenological movement survive intact amongst the ever-expanding adherence to some part of this doctrine? Will phenomenology cease to be a major influence in contemporary continental philosophy and beyond? Are we dealing with a purely and intrinsically French phenomenon in the vast domain of all philosophy? Can some resolution be brought about through the limitation, or de-limitation, of our sphere of investigation? Will we ever succeed in lifting the ambivalence out of the phenomenological project?" "Dominique Janicaud advises us to consider a "minimalist" approach to these questions, one that would leave phenomenology open to its greatest possibilities. We must consider the scientific and metaphysical overinvestment of phenomenology. Yet we must also imagine how phenomenology might finally escape this unifying and foundational tendency, which has driven it to overburden immanence with a transcendence that is none other than that of subjectivity in its various guises and at its various levels."--Jacket "After the subject" and beyond Heideggerian ontology there is the sheer givenness of phenomena without condition. In theology, this liberation means rethinking God in terms of phenomena such as love, gift, and excess. Includes an essay by Marion, "The Reason of the Gift," and a dialogue between Marion and Richard Kearney. Content: Pt. 1. Marion on Descartes, Husserl, and Heidegger -- pt. 2. Marion : gift and reception -- pt. 3. Marion and beyond.
دانلود کتاب Givenness and God: Questions of Jean-Luc Marion (Perspectives in Continental Philosophy) (NO. 43)
After the subject and beyond Heideggerian ontology,Marion suggests, there is the sheer givenness ofphenomena without condition. In theology, this liberationmeans rethinking God in terms of phenomena such aslove, gift, and excess. In addition to an important essayby Marion, The Reason of the Gift, and a dialoguebetween Marion and Richard Kearney, this book containsstimulating essays by ten other contributors: Lilian Alweiss,Eoin Cassidy, Mark Dooley, Brian Elliott, Ian Leask,Shane Mackinlay, Derek Morrow, John O'Donohue,Joseph S. O'Leary, and Felix à Murchadha. After the subject and beyond Heideggerian ontology, Marion suggests, there is the givenness of phenomena without condition. In theology, this liberation means rethinking God in terms of phenomena such as love, gift, and excess. In addition to an important essay by Marion, The Reason of the Gift, and a dialogue between Marion and Richard Kearney, this book contains stimulating essays by ten other contributors: Lilian Alweiss, Eoin Cassidy, Mark Dooley, Brian Elliott, Ian Leask, Shane Mackinlay, Derek Morrow, John O'Donohue, Joseph S. O'Leary, and Felix à Murchadha. Givenness and God 5 Contents 7 Acknowledgments 9 Abbreviations 11 Foreword 15 Introduction 19 Part I: Marion on Descartes, Husserl, and Heidegger 27 Chapter 1: The Conceptual Idolatry of Descartes’s Gray Ontology 29 Chapter 2: I Am, I Exist 55 Chapter 3: Hubris and Humility 65 Chapter 4: Glory, Idolatry, Kairos 87 Chapter 5: Reduced Phenomena and Unreserved Debts in Marion’s Reading of Heidegger 105 Part II: Marion: Gift and Reception 117 Chapter 6: The Reason of the Gift 119 Chapter 7: The Gift 153 Chapter 8: Phenomenality in the Middle 185 Chapter 9: The Dative Subject (and the ‘‘Principle of Principles’’) 200 Chapter 10: Marion’s Ambition of Transcendence 208 Part III: Marion and Beyond 217 Chapter 11: Le phénoméne érotique: Augustinian Resonances in Marion’s Phenomenology of Love 219 Chapter 12: Hermeneutics of the Possible God 238 Chapter 13: Giving More 261 Chapter 14: The Absent Threshold: An Eckhartian Afterword 276 Notes 303 Contributors 359 Index 363 Other Books in Fordham's Perspectives in Continental Philosophy Series 365 Foreword / Dermot A. Lane -- Introduction / Ian Leask And Eoin Cassidy -- 1. The Conceptual Idolatry Of Descartes's Gray Ontology : An Epistemology Without Being / Derek J. Morrow -- 2. I Am, I Exist / Lilian Alweiss -- 3. Hubris And Humility : Husserl's Reduction And Givenness / Timothy Mooney -- 4. Glory, Idolatry, Kairos : Revelation And The Ontological Difference In Marion / Felix O Murchadha -- 5. Reduced Phenomena And Unreserved Debts In Marion's Reading Of Heidegger / Brian Elliott -- 6. The Reason Of The Gift / Jean-luc Marion -- 7. The Gift : A Trojan Horse In The Citadel Of Phenomenology? / Joseph S. O'leary -- 8. Phenomenality In The Middle : Marion, Romana, And The Hermeneutics Of The Event / Shane Mackinlay. Edited By Ian Leask And Eoin Cassidy. Includes Bibliographical References (p. 285-339) And Index. Annotation After the subject and beyond Heideggerian ontology, Marion suggests, there is the sheer givenness of phenomena without condition. In theology, this liberation means rethinking God in terms of phenomena such as love, gift, and excess. In addition to an important essay by Marion, "The Reason of the Gift," and a dialogue between Marion and Richard Kearney, this book contains stimulating essays by ten other contributors: Lilian Alweiss, Eoin Cassidy, Mark Dooley, Brian Elliott, Ian Leask, Shane Mackinlay, Derek Morrow, John O'Donohue, Joseph S. O'Leary, and Felix O Murchadha "Is phenomenology in jeopardy? Will the phenomenological movement survive intact amongst the ever-expanding adherence to some part of this doctrine? Will phenomenology cease to be a major influence in contemporary continental philosophy and beyond? Are we dealing with a purely and intrinsically French phenomenon in the vast domain of all philosophy? Can some resolution be brought about through the limitation, or de-limitation, of our sphere of investigation? Will we ever succeed in lifting the ambivalence out of the phenomenological project?" "Dominique Janicaud advises us to consider a "minimalist" approach to these questions, one that would leave phenomenology open to its greatest possibilities. We must consider the scientific and metaphysical overinvestment of phenomenology. Yet we must also imagine how phenomenology might finally escape this unifying and foundational tendency, which has driven it to overburden immanence with a transcendence that is none other than that of subjectivity in its various guises and at its various levels."--Jacket "After the subject" and beyond Heideggerian ontology there is the sheer givenness of phenomena without condition. In theology, this liberation means rethinking God in terms of phenomena such as love, gift, and excess. Includes an essay by Marion, "The Reason of the Gift," and a dialogue between Marion and Richard Kearney. Content: Pt. 1. Marion on Descartes, Husserl, and Heidegger -- pt. 2. Marion : gift and reception -- pt. 3. Marion and beyond.