Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Elaine Pagels (ur. 13 lutego 1943) – amerykańska profesor religioznawstwa, badająca dzieje chrześcijaństwa. Pagels urodziła się w Kalifornii, ukończyła Stanford University (tytuł B.A. otrzymała w 1964, M.A. - 1965). Tytuł Ph.D. otrzymała na Harvard University.

  2. Elaine Pagels,” pp. 201-214 in S. Paulson, Atoms & Eden: Conversations on Religion & Science, Oxford University Press, Inc., 2010. “Anthony’s Letters and Nag Hammadi Codex 1: Sources of Religious Conflict in Fourth-Century Egypt,” in: Journal of Early Christian Studies Johns Hopkins University Press 18:4, 2010, 557-589.

  3. 14 de jun. de 2003 · By Dinitia Smith. June 14, 2003. On a bright Sunday in February 1982, a grief-stricken Elaine Pagels, jogging in running shorts, found herself stopping at the Church of the Heavenly Rest in ...

  4. Elaine Pagels joined the Princeton faculty in 1982, shortly after receiving a MacArthur Fellowship. Perhaps best known as the author of The Gnostic Gospels, The Origin of Satan, and Adam, Eve and the Serpent, she has published widely on Gnosticism and early Christianity, and continues to pursue research interests in late antiquity.Her most recent books include Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel ...

  5. Elaine Pagels, a historian of religion, is the Harrington Spear Paine Professor at Princeton University. She received the MacArthur Prize Fellowship for creative work, and is best known for her books on the early history of Christianity, especially The Gnostic Gospels, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award and The American Book Award; the […]

  6. 16 de abr. de 2019 · Pagels looks at her own life to address questions of the persistence and nature of belief and why religion is still around in the 21st century. Pagels will hold a conversation about the book with Wallace Best, professor of religion and African American studies, at 6 p.m. Monday, April 29, at Labyrinth Books, 122 Nassau St.

  7. Elaine Pagels. 2015 National Humanities Medalist. Anna Maria Gillis. HUMANITIES, Fall 2016, Volume 37, Number 4. Photo caption. For Elaine Pagels, the history of early Christianity is a huge jigsaw puzzle—one where “most of the parts are missing.”. Not many manuscripts have survived from the ancient world, she says.