Die Autoren des vorliegenden Bandes setzen sich mit islamischen und christlichen Vorstellungen vom menschlichen Leben auseinander. Auf der Grundlage klassischer und zeitgenössischer theologischer Fragen und Interessen bieten sie der geistes- und naturwissenschaftlichen Forschung wichtige Einblicke in Debatten über den Menschen, sein Wesen, seine Zukunft und seine Ziele.
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Produkt-Hinweis
Maße
Höhe: 24 cm
Breite: 16.4 cm
Dicke: 2.1 cm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-3-16-161777-5 (9783161617775)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Herausgeber*in
(1955-2021) Studium der Ev. Theologie und Philosophie; 1978 Promotion; 1990 Habilitation; 2004-18 Professor für Systematische Theologie und Leiter des Instituts für Hermeneutik und Dialog der Kulturen an der Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen; 2018-21 Professor für Systematische Theologie an der University of St. Andrews in Schottland.
Born 1975; Professor of Islamic Doctrine at the Center for Islamic Theology, University of Tübingen, Germany.
Born 1982; Independent Researcher in Philosophy and Religious Education, currently resident in Istanbul.
Born 1960; Lecturer in Islamic Studies at the Faculty of Divinity, University of Cambridge, and Dean of the Cambridge Muslim College.
Born 1960; Rector of St. Andrew's Biblical Theological Institute, Editor in Chief of St. Andrew's Institute Press (Moscow) and Researcher at the Free University of Amsterdam.
Tim Winter: Introduction
Part I: Created in the Image: Human Wholeness
Christoph Schwöbel: 'Theology ... defines the whole and complete and perfect human being.' Being Human in the Dispute between Theology and Philosophy: Variations on a Christian, Muslim and Jewish Theme - Recep Sentürk: Multiplex Human Ontology and Multiplex Self: An Alternative Understanding of Human Behaviour
Part II: Death and Human Becoming
Ivana Noble: Created to Be and to Become Human: A Christian Perspective - Lejla Demiri: 'He Who has created death and life' (Q 67:2): Death in Islamic Theology and Spirituality
Part III: Belief and Devotion
Ruggero Vimercati Sanseverino: 'The Prophet is closer to the believers than they are to themselves' (Q 33:6): A Scriptural Inquiry into the Anthropological Foundation of the Ittiba ? al-Nabi (Sequela Prophetae) - Amina Nawaz: Mutual Influences of Christian and Muslim Anthropologies in History: A Case Study of Sixteenth-Century Morisco Devotions
Part IV: The Child in Human Becoming
Friedrich Schweitzer: The Anthropology of the Child: Opportunities and Challenges for a Neglected Topic in Christian-Muslim Dialogue - Mujadad Zaman: Children in the Medieval Islamic Imagination: A Path Towards Pedagogic Dialogue
Part V: Dignity and Sinfulness
Daniel A. Madigan SJ: 'These people have no grasp of God's true measure' (Q 39:67): Does the Doctrine of Original Sin do Justice to God and to Humanity? - Ralf K. Wüstenberg: The 'Fall' of Mankind: Structural Parallels between the Narratives of Sin in Christianity and Islam
Part VI: Limits to Being, Limits to Naming God
Simone Dario Nardella: God, Man, Being: ?Abd al-Ghani¯ al-Nabulusi's Explanation of the Intellect's Capacity to Know God in al-Wujud al-?aqq - Paul-A. Hardy: On Naming and Silencing - Conor Cunningham: Thomas Aquinas' Anthropology: Stuck in the Middle with You
Part VII: Futures
Michael Kirwan SJ/Ahmad Achtar: 'The wound where light enters': A 'Common Word' for Being Human in Islam and Christianity