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Index
Cover
Title
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Note
Bibliography
Part I Philosophy of Religion and the Philosophical Tradition
1. Re-envisioning Philosophy of Religion
Paul Ricoeur
Intercultural Philosophy and Religion
Postcolonialism
Women and Philosophy of Religion
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
2. Toward a New Paradigm for Philosophy of Religion
Human Being Is Fragile
Human Being Is Fallible
Human Being Is Finite
Finitude and Freedom
Conclusion
Note
Bibliography
3. Re-visioning “Life” in Philosophy of Religion Today: Or: A New Concept for a Global Philosophy of Religious Life
Preliminary Matters
Life and Philosophers from the Margins
After Re-visioning Gender in Philosophy
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
4. After the End of Philosophy of Religion
What Comes After the End?
The Wisdom to Question
The Return to Metaphysics
The East–West Divide
The Marriage of East and West
Notes
Bibliography
5. The End of Philosophy of Religion?
A Diverse Object of Inquiry
A Diverse Community of Inquiry
Thick Description
Formal Comparison
Multidimensional Evaluation
The End
Notes
Bibliography
6. Religion Beyond the Limits of Reason: Inoue Enryō, Kim Iryŏp, and Tanabe Hajime on Philosophy of Religion
Question of the Genre: Philosophy and Religion in Inoue Enryō
Kim Iryŏp’s Philosophy of Religion: God, the Buddha, and Us Humans
Tanabe Hajime and Philosophy/Religion as Repentance
The Modern Self and the Philosophy of Religion from East Asian Perspectives
Notes
Bibliography
Part II Philosophy of Religion and Religious Studies, Theology, and the Modern Academy
7. The New Geophilosophy: How Globalization and Postcolonial Theory Are defining Contemporary Philosophy of Religion
The Coming of a New Geophilosophy
Laruelle and Derridean Indecision
Speculative Realism and the Specter of Religion
Postcolonial and Globalization Theory
A Philosophy of the Future
Subalternity and the Religious
Bibliography
8. The Enecstatic Jig: Personalizing Philosophy of Religion
A Methodological Quandary as Bridge
Philosophy of Religion as Enecstatic
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
9. Reverence as Critical Responsiveness: Between Philosophy and Religion
Philosophy, Religion, Critique
Critical Thinking and Practices of Subjectivity
Criticism and Religion
Philosophy and Critical Responsiveness
Theology and Criticism
Critical Reverence
Notes
Bibliography
10. Radical Theologians, Knights of Faith, and the Future of the Philosophy of Religion
The To-Come (À Venir), the Event (Événement)
The Place of Radical Theology
Radical Theology and Radical Hermeneutics
Radical Theology as a Heretical Hegelianism
Deconstructing the Distinction between Radical and Confessional Theology
The Future of the Philosophy of Religion
Notes
Bibliography
11. What Can Non-Philosophy Do for Philosophy of Religion? Non-Science and Non-Religion in the Work of François Laruelle
Notes
Bibliography
12. Reforming Philosophy of Religion for the Modern Academy
Introduction
Rebutting Criticisms of Philosophy of Religion
A Positive Case in Support of a “Reformed” Philosophy of Religion
Philosophy of Religion and the Diversity of Higher Education
Reforming Philosophy of Religion
Steps toward Reforming Philosophy of Religion
Step 1: Acknowledge the Problems
Step 2: Truth in Advertising
Step 3: Give Up the Disciplinary Ideal
Step 4: Enclose Internal Debates Within a Publicly Intelligible Frame
Step 5: Adopt “Philosophical Research Into Religious Beliefs and Practices”
Step 6: Rewrite the Textbooks in Philosophy of Religion
Step 7: Conduct Internal Debates Quietly, Mindful of the Challenges
Consensus Required
Consensus Not Required
Conclusion
Note
Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index
Back Cover
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