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Styles of piety: practicing philosophy after the death of God
S. Clark Buckner and Matthew Statler
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Frontmatter
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Introduction (S. Clark Buckner and Matthew Statler, page 1)
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PART I: THE PERSISTENT PROBLEM OF VALUE
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1 Violations (Alphonso Lingis, page 15)
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2 Fatherhood and the Promise of Ethics (Kelly Oliver, page 35)
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3 Suffering Faith in Philosophy (S. Clark Buckner, page 55)
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4 Becoming Real---With Style (Merold Westphal, page 76)
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5 Morality without God (Charles E. Scott, page 93)
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PART II: PHILOSOPHY AND ITS FICTIONS
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6 How Does Philosophy Become What It Is? (Matthew Statler, page 105)
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7 Genealogy, History, and the Work of Fiction (Jason K. Winfree, page 119)
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8 Tragic Dislocation: Antigone's Modern Theatrics (Tina Chanter, page 151)
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9 A Touch of Piety: The Tragedy of Antigone's Hands (Michael Naas, page 171)
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PART III: DECONSTRUCTION AND RELIGION
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10 The Prayers and Tears of Jacques Derrida (John D. Caputo, page 193)
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11 God: Poison or Cure? A Reply to John D. Caputo (David Wood, page 205)
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12 Those Weeping Eyes, Those Seeing Tears: Reading John D. Caputo's Ethics (Edith Wyschogrod, page 212)
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13 Derrida and Dante: The Promise of Writing and the Piety of Broken Promises (Francis J. Ambrosio, page 222)
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14 Laughing, Praying, Weeping before God: A Response (John D. Caputo, page 253)
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Notes (page 271)
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Index (page 301)
Citable Link
Published: c2005
Publisher: Fordham University Press
- 9780823225002 (hardcover)
- 9780823237081 (ebook)
- 9780823225019 (paper)