Who Are We Now?: Christian Humanism: Christian Humanism And The Global MarketA&C Black, 27.01.2000 - 466 Seiten Theology can no longer exist in isolation from politics, philosophy and literature. This is Nicholas Boyle's basis for an examination of personal and cultural identity in today's world. His exploration of the global mind reveals the continuing importance of a Christian perspective in a secular world. He shows that modern trends towards greater diversity and pluralism and simultaneous trends towards greater unification can be reconciled within the Catholic humanist tradition of theology, philosophy and literature. He identifies Postmodernism as 'the pessimism of an obsolescent class - the salaried official intelligentsia - whose fate is closely bound up with that of the declining nation-state'. In this brilliant book, Dr Boyle gives new grounds for optimism about the emerging new world order> |
Inhalt
Understanding Germany | 123 |
Martin Heidegger and the Treason of the Clerks | 181 |
Crossing the Line? | 211 |
The Idea of Christian Poetry | 283 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
become belief bodies bourgeois bourgeoisie Britain British called capital Catholic central Christian Christian poetry Church citizens civil society conflict constitution consumers culture Dante death Derrida economic Empire Enlightenment Europe European European Union example existence fascism forces freedom French French Revolution fundamental future German Germany's global market Hegel Hegelian Heidegger Heidegger's human identity illusion imperial individual institutions intellectual Jünger Kant literary literature lives Martin Heidegger Marx means ment metaphorical middle mode modern monarchy moral nation-state Nietzsche Nietzsche's nineteenth century nomic officials party perhaps philosophy poem poetry poets political structure possible post-modern Post-Modernist production Prussia question realistic reality Reformation relation religious revolution role secular seems sense simply social sumers T. S. Eliot term Thatcherism Thatcherist theory things Thomas Mann thought tion tional tradition truth understanding universal Weimar Republic worker