The Uses of Paradox: Religion, Self-Transformation, and the Absurd
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In this groundbreaking comparative study, Matthew Bagger investigates the role of paradox in Western and Asian religious discourse. Drawing on both philosophy and social scientific theory, he offers a naturalistic explanation of religion's oft-noted propensity to sublime paradox and argues that religious thinkers employ intractable paradoxes as the basis for various techniques of self-transformation.
Considering the writings of Kierkegaard, Pseudo-Dionysus, St. John of the Cross, N?g?rjuna,...






















