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Saintly influence: Edith Wyschogrod and the possibilities of philosophy of religion
Eric Boynton and Martin Kavka
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Frontmatter
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Preface (page xi)
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Introduction (Eric Boynton and Martin Kavka, page 1)
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The Uncertainity Principle (Mark C. Taylor, page 16)
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PART I. THE ETHICAL AND TRANSCENDENCE
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The Impossible Possibility of Ethics (Thomas J. J. Altizer, page 31)
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The Empty Suitcase as Rainbow (Merold Westphal, page 48)
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Hosting the Stranger and the Pilgrim: A Christian Theological Reflection (Graham Ward, page 63)
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"God," Gods, God (Adriaan T. Peperzak, page 82)
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PART II. PRACTICES OF INFLUENCE
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The Name of God in Levinas's Philosophy (Robert Gibbs, page 97)
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Kenotic Overflow and Temporal Transcendence: Angelic Embodiment and the Alterity of Time in Abraham Abulafia (Elliot R. Wolfson, page 113)
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Tribute to Derrida (Amy Hollywood, page 150)
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PART III. CHANNELING HISTORY
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Hearing the Voices of the Dead: Wyschogrod, Megill, and the Heterological Historian (John D. Caputo, page 161)
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Memory and Violence, or Genealogies of Remembering (Werner H. Kelber, page 175)
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The Historian and the Messianic "Now": Reading Edith Wyschogrod's An Ethics of Remembering (Bettina Bergo, page 202)
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Saints and the Heterological Historian (Peter Ochs, page 219)
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PART IV. RESPONSE
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An Exercise in Upbuilding (Edith Wyschogrod, page 241)
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Notes (page 261)
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Contributors (page 311)
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Index (page 317)
Citable Link
Published: 2009
Publisher: Fordham University Press
- 9780823230884 (paper)
- 9780823230891 (ebook)
- 9780823230877 (hardcover)