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The "Manifesto" develops further the Critical Theory of Religion intrinsic to the Critical Theory of Society of the Frankfurt School into a new paradigm of the Psychology, Sociology, Philosophy and Theology of Religion. Its central theme is the theodicy problem. The "Manifesto" approaches this theme in the framework of comparative religion and critical political theology in a narrative and discursive fashion. In search for a solution to the theodicy problem the "Manifesto" explores with the help the critical theory of society from Max Horkheimer and Ernst Bloch through Walter Benjamin and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The "Manifesto" develops further the Critical Theory of Religion intrinsic to the Critical Theory of Society of the Frankfurt School into a new paradigm of the Psychology, Sociology, Philosophy and Theology of Religion. Its central theme is the theodicy problem. The "Manifesto" approaches this theme in the framework of comparative religion and critical political theology in a narrative and discursive fashion. In search for a solution to the theodicy problem the "Manifesto" explores with the help the critical theory of society from Max Horkheimer and Ernst Bloch through Walter Benjamin and Theodor W. Adorno, Herbert Marcuse, Erich Fromm and Leo Loewenthal to Jurgen Habermas and Axel Honneth and with the assistance of the new political theology from Johannes B. Metz through Helmut Peukert to Edmund Arens, trends in civil society toward Alternative Future I (the Totally Administered Society), Alternative Future II (the Militarized Society), and Alternative Future III (the Reconciled Society) in the horizon of the longing for the Wholly Other as perfect justice and unconditional love.
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Autorenporträt
Rudolf Siebert was born in 1927 in Frankfurt a.M., Germany. He received his Licentiate and Ph.D. in Theology from Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz, Germany in 1962 after studying history, philosophy, sociology, and theology at the Universities of Frankfurt, Mainz, Munster and the Catholic University of America in Washington D.C., U.S.A. Siebert has taught, lectured and published widely in Western and Eastern Europe, Israel, the United States and Canada. He is professor of Religion and Society and Director of the Center for Humanistic Studies at Western Michigan University and of the international course on the Future of Religion in the I.U.C. Dubrovnik, Croatia, and of the international course on Religion and Civil Society in Yalta, Crimea, Ukraine. His previous major works were The Critical Theory of Religion: Frankfurt School, and From Critical Theory to Critical Political Theology: Personal Autonomy and Universal Solidarity.