Taking up the critique of theology found in the work of Heidegger, George Pattison argues for a model of thinking about God that would not be liable to the charge of "enframing" that Heidegger sees as characteristic of technological thinking. He constructs his case in relation to particular issues in bioethics, the place of theology in the university, the arts, and the contemporary experience of living in the city.
Taking up the critique of theology found in the work of Heidegger, George Pattison argues for a model of thinking about God that would not be liable to the charge of "enframing" that Heidegger sees as characteristic of technological thinking. He constructs his case in relation to particular issues in bioethics, the place of theology in the university, the arts, and the contemporary experience of living in the city.
George Pattison is Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity, Oxford University.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction: Technology's Question to Technology 1: The Long Goodbye 2: Theologies of Technology 3: Heidegger and the Question Concerning Technology 4: We are Free to Think about God 5: Putting it into Words 6: Seeing the Mystery 7: From Thinking about God to Acting in the World 8: Cyberversity or University? 9: The Religion of Art in an Age of Technology 10: Conclusion Postscript: City of the Homeless
Introduction: Technology's Question to Technology 1: The Long Goodbye 2: Theologies of Technology 3: Heidegger and the Question Concerning Technology 4: We are Free to Think about God 5: Putting it into Words 6: Seeing the Mystery 7: From Thinking about God to Acting in the World 8: Cyberversity or University? 9: The Religion of Art in an Age of Technology 10: Conclusion Postscript: City of the Homeless
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