Athens and Jerusalem : God, Humans, and Nature
Athens and Jerusalem : God, Humans, and Nature
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Author(s): Novak, David
ISBN No.: 9781487506179
Pages: 392
Year: 201911
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 171.74
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Chapter I: Philosophy and Theology 1. Athens and Jerusalem 2. Misunderstanding the Relation of Philosophy and Theology 3. Public Faith Commitments 4. The Challenge of Philosophy 5. Content and Method 6. Faith and Reason 7. Rejections of Revelation 8.


Philosophical Hermeneutics Chapter II: God, Humans, and Nature 9. The Engagement of Philosophy and Theology 10. The Relation of God and Humans 11. God's Mutability in Relation to Humans 12. The Relation of God and Nature 13. Nature and Its Miraculous Exceptions 14. Miracles and Laws of Nature 15. God's Mutability in Relation to Nature Chapter III: Humans and Nature 16.


Humans Related to each Other and to God: Jerusalem 17. Humans Related to Each Other 18. Humans Related to Nature: Jerusalem 19. Is and Ought 20. Human Appreciation of God's Creation 21. Contemporary Environmentalism 22. Tampering with Created Nature 23. Humans Related to Nature: Athens Chapter IV: Philo and Plato 24.


The First Challenge of Philosophy to Theology 25. The Relation of God and Nature 26. Plato on God and Nature 27. Philo on God and Nature 28. The Relation of God and Humans 29. Plato on Interhuman Relations 30. Philo on Interhuman Relations 31. Philo on the Relation of Humans and Nature Chapter V: Maimonides and Aristotle 32.


Maimonides' Challenge 33. Aristotle's Teleology 34. Aristotle: Ethics and Ontology 35. Aristotle's Ontology 36. Maimonides on the Relation of God and Nature 37. Maimonides' Ontology 38. Maimonides on the Relation of God and Humans 39. Maimonides on Interhuman Relations 40.


Maimonides on the Relation of Humans and Nature Chapter VI: Kant's Challenge to Theology 41. The Last Challenge of Philosophy 42. The Relation of Humans and Nature 43. Noumena: Intellect and Will 44. Autonomy in Interhuman Relations 45. The Categorical Imperative: First Formulation 46. The Categorical Imperative: Second Formulation 47. The Categorical Imperative: Third Formulation 48.


Jewish Reactions to the First Formulation of the Categorical Imperative 49. Jewish Reactions to the Second Formulation of the Categorical Imperative 50. Jewish Reactions to the Third Formulation of the Categorical Imperative 51. The Relation of God and Humans 52. The Relation of God and Nature 53. Jewish Reactions to Kant's Notion of the Relation of God and Nature 54. Conclusion.


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