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E-grāmata: Contradictory Christ

(O'Neill Chair of Philosophy, University of Notre Dame)
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In this ground-breaking study, Jc Beall shows that the fundamental "problem" of Christology is simple to see from the role that Christ occupies: the Christ figure is to have the divine and essentially limitless properties of the one and only God but Christ is equally to have the human, essentially limit-imposing properties involved in human nature, limits essentially involved in being human. The role that Christ occupies thereby appears to demand a contradiction: all of the limitlessness of God, and all of the limits of humans. This book lays out Beall's contradictory account of Jesus Christ — and thereby a contradictory Christian theology.

Recenzijas

Theologians use different methods to address Christological contradictions. Some contend that they are only apparent contradictions. Others hold the contradictions to be true while eliminating logic from theology. Jc Beall takes a different approach. Beall's approach in The Contradictory Christ is to hold Christological contradictions as real and true while preserving a place for reason and logic in theology. * Aaron Moldenhauer, assistant professor of theology at Concordia University Wisconsin, Reading Religion * Those who have sensed the contradiction of Christ and have been unsatisfied with answers striving for consistency will be pleased with contradictory Christ theology. It is indeed theologically faithful and, for those willing to entertain non-classical logic, logically sound. * Nichole Torbitzky, International Journal of Systematic Theology * In The Contradictory Christ, Beall does his best to explain the issues in an elementary manner, and he does a good job, but readers who start this book with little understanding of symbolic logic must be willing to acquire such an understanding in the process of reading it. Beall writes as an analytic theologian; parts of the book originated in the pages of the Journal of Analytic Theology. Just as physicists aim to present true theories about physical reality, Beall aims to present true theories about God (and, therefore, about Christ). A physicist who wants to understand the structure of space must be willing to understand Riemannian geometry and, if Beall is right, a theologian who wants to understand the logic of the incarnation must be willing to understand the logic of First Degree Entailment. * Benjamin Murphy, The Heythrop Journal *

1 Contradictory Christology
1(12)
1.1 The longstanding christological quest
1(2)
1.2 The central thesis: Christ the contradiction
3(3)
1.3 Terminology: contradiction and contradictory beings
6(1)
1.4 The rarity of true contradictory theories
7(2)
1.5 Summary and looking forward
9(4)
2 Logic and Its Possibilities
13(23)
2.1 Entailment relations in general
14(8)
2.2 The role of logic in general and in theology
22(5)
2.3 Logic: subclassical
27(6)
2.4 Logic: the target consequence relation
33(1)
2.5 Salient logical (in-) validities
34(1)
2.6 Chief virtues of this account of logic
35(1)
3 Seven Virtues
36(13)
3.1 Simplicity
37(1)
3.2 Avoiding ad hoc changes in meaning
38(1)
3.3 Metaphysical neutrality
39(1)
3.4 Preserving the principal subject of christology
40(2)
3.5 Balancing `from above' and `from below'
42(2)
3.6 Preserving the mystery of the hypostatic union
44(1)
3.7 Christology and the obvious need for faith
45(2)
3.8 Closing big-picture remarks
47(2)
4 Some Objections
49(70)
4.1 Methodological issues
49(11)
4.2 Epistemological issues
60(9)
4.3 Theological issues
69(26)
4.4 Metaphysical issues
95(10)
4.5 Ecumenical issues
105(14)
5 Measured Against Alternative Views
119(33)
5.1 From incarnation to contradiction
119(1)
5.2 Standard routes towards consistency
120(1)
5.3 QUA-device accounts
121(4)
5.4 Explicitly compositional accounts
125(3)
5.5 Explicit meaning-changing accounts
128(8)
5.6 Identity-relation accounts
136(9)
5.7 Epistemic-mystery strategies
145(5)
5.8 Contradictory precedents?
150(2)
6 Towards the Trinity
152(25)
6.1 Important disclaimer
152(2)
6.2 Some methodological rules of thumb
154(3)
6.3 Accounting for the trinity
157(1)
6.4 Whereof trinity-driven contradictions?
158(2)
6.5 Trinitarian identity
160(13)
6.6 The big picture
173(4)
Bibliography 177(6)
Index 183
Jc Beall is O'Neill Chair of Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame.