Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Catherine Pickstock, After Writing: On the Liturgical Consummation of Philosophy (Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 1998), xv + 292 pp. ISBN 0 631 20672 8 pbk. - Volume 1 Issue 2

  2. 22 de oct. de 2020 · In her ambitious new book, Catherine Pickstock addresses these profound questions, arguing that epistemological approaches to truth either fail argumentatively or else offer only vacuity. She advances instead a bold metaphysical and realist appraisal which overcomes the Kantian impasse of 'subjective knowing' and ban on reaching beyond supposedly finite limits.

  3. Catherine Pickstock is Norris-Hulse Professor of Divinity at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge. Her books include After Writing: On the Liturgical Consummation of Philosophy (1997), Thomas d Aquin et la Quête Eucharistique (2001) and Repetition and Identity (2014). In addition, she was co-editor

  4. Catherine Pickstock came to Cambridge on a choral scholarship to study English literature at St Catharine's College and never left! Catherine is a well-known theologian, lecturer and speaker, co-founding the Christian theological and philosophical school of thought called Radical Orthodoxy.

  5. 21 de oct. de 2023 · Aspects of Truth: A New Religious Metaphysics by Catherine Pickstock. Katherine Apostolacus View all authors and affiliations. Based on: Aspects of Truth: A New Religious Metaphysics. By Pickstock Catherine. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2020. 323 pp. $39.99.

  6. Radical Orthodoxy. : John Milbank, Catherine Pickstock, Graham Ward. Routledge, 1999 - Religion - 285 pages. Radical Orthodoxy is a new wave of theological thinking that seeks to re-inject the modern world with theology. The group of theologians associated with Radical Orthodoxy are dissatisfied with conteporary theological responses to both ...

  7. 6 de nov. de 2019 · As a perspicacious reader might recognise, the title of Catherine Pickstock’s Repetition and Identity seems to echo Gilles Deleuze’s 1968 Difference and Repetition. Deleuze is perhaps the greatest conscious 20 th c. champion of the univocity of being, as part one of this essay made clear.