The Resounding Soul: Reflections on the Metaphysics and Vivacity of the Human Person
It is surely not coincidental that the term "soul" should mean not only the center of a creature's life and consciousness, but also a thing or action characterized by intense vivacity ("that bike's got soul!"). It also seems far from coincidental that the same contemporary academic discussions that have largely cast aside the language of "soul" in their quest to define the character of human mental life should themselves be so--how to say it?--bloodless, so lacking in soul. This volume arises from the opposite premise, namely that the task of understanding human nature is bound up with and in important respects dependent upon the more critical task of learning to be fully human, of learning to have soul. The papers collected here are derived from a conference in Oxford sponsored by the Centre of Theology and Philosophy and together explore the often surprising landscape that emerges when human consciousness is approached from this angle. Drawing upon literary, philosophical, theological, historical, and musical modes of analysis, the essays of this volume vividly remind the reader of the power of the ancient language of soul over against contemporary impulses to reduce, fragment, and overly determine human selfhood.
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The Resounding Soul: Reflections on the Metaphysics and Vivacity of the Human Person
It is surely not coincidental that the term "soul" should mean not only the center of a creature's life and consciousness, but also a thing or action characterized by intense vivacity ("that bike's got soul!"). It also seems far from coincidental that the same contemporary academic discussions that have largely cast aside the language of "soul" in their quest to define the character of human mental life should themselves be so--how to say it?--bloodless, so lacking in soul. This volume arises from the opposite premise, namely that the task of understanding human nature is bound up with and in important respects dependent upon the more critical task of learning to be fully human, of learning to have soul. The papers collected here are derived from a conference in Oxford sponsored by the Centre of Theology and Philosophy and together explore the often surprising landscape that emerges when human consciousness is approached from this angle. Drawing upon literary, philosophical, theological, historical, and musical modes of analysis, the essays of this volume vividly remind the reader of the power of the ancient language of soul over against contemporary impulses to reduce, fragment, and overly determine human selfhood.
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The Resounding Soul: Reflections on the Metaphysics and Vivacity of the Human Person

The Resounding Soul: Reflections on the Metaphysics and Vivacity of the Human Person

The Resounding Soul: Reflections on the Metaphysics and Vivacity of the Human Person

The Resounding Soul: Reflections on the Metaphysics and Vivacity of the Human Person

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Overview

It is surely not coincidental that the term "soul" should mean not only the center of a creature's life and consciousness, but also a thing or action characterized by intense vivacity ("that bike's got soul!"). It also seems far from coincidental that the same contemporary academic discussions that have largely cast aside the language of "soul" in their quest to define the character of human mental life should themselves be so--how to say it?--bloodless, so lacking in soul. This volume arises from the opposite premise, namely that the task of understanding human nature is bound up with and in important respects dependent upon the more critical task of learning to be fully human, of learning to have soul. The papers collected here are derived from a conference in Oxford sponsored by the Centre of Theology and Philosophy and together explore the often surprising landscape that emerges when human consciousness is approached from this angle. Drawing upon literary, philosophical, theological, historical, and musical modes of analysis, the essays of this volume vividly remind the reader of the power of the ancient language of soul over against contemporary impulses to reduce, fragment, and overly determine human selfhood.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498232081
Publisher: Cascade Books
Publication date: 11/10/2015
Series: Veritas , #16
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 424
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Eric Austin Lee (PhD) is Research Fellow/Deputy Director, North America at the Centre of Theology and Philosophy, University of Nottingham, where he also received his PhD. He is coeditor of the Veritas and KALOS book series.

Samuel Kimbriel (MPhil; PhD) is a Teaching Fellow in philosophical theology at the University of Nottingham. He is the author of Friendship as Sacred Knowing: Overcoming Isolation (2014).

Table of Contents

Preface xi

Acknowledgments xiii

List of Contributors xv

Introduction Samuel Kimbriel Eric Austin Lee 1

Section I The Soul and the Saeculum

1 The Experience of Death: The Immortality of the Soul and the Unity of the Person in Landsberg, Scheler, and Augustine Anna Piazza 25

2 Bernard Stiegler's Politics of the Soul and His New Otium of the People Johann Rossouw 40

3 Eucharistic Anthropology: Alexander Schmemann's Conception of Beings in Time Andrew T. J. Kaethler 60

4 The Psychology of Cosmopolitics John Milbank 78

Section II Fracture and Unity

5 "Know Thyself": The Soul of Anatomical Dissection Kimbell Kornu 93

6 Persons and Narratives: A Physicalist Account of the Soul K. Nicholas Forti 114

7 Transcending the Body/Soul Distinction through the Perspective of Maximus the Confessor's Anthropology Sotiris Mitralexis 135

8 Nous (Energeia) and Kardia (Dynamis) in the Holistic Anthropology of St. Gregory Palamas Nichifor Tanase 149

9 Souls, Minds, Bodies, and Planets Mary Midgley 175

Section III Moving to Wholeness

10 The Soul in the Novel: From Daniel Defoe to David Foster Wallace Edmund Waldstein 199

11 Difficult Conversion: Shakespeare and the Soul of Religion Anthony D. Baker 211

12 Both, Between, and Beyond: The Third Term and the Relation Constituting Being I. C. Wilson 231

Section IV The Soul's Regard

13 Strategies of the Gift: Body and Soul in John Paul II and Levinas Nigel Zimmermann 249

14 Redeeming Duality: Anthropological Split-ness and Embodied Soteriology Lexi Eikelboom 266

15 Music and Liminal Ethics: Facilitating a "Soulful Reality" Eerdia J. Stone-Davis 285

Section V Vivacity

16 The Soul and "All Things": Contribution to a Postmodern Account of the Soul W. Chris Hackett 307

17 The Soul at Work: A Reading in Catholic Romanticism Simone Kolva 330

18 Soul Music and Soul-less Selving William Desmond 352

Name and Subject Index 391

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