American Philosophers Read Scripture
American Philosophers Read Scripture
hardback
Published:
13 December, 2019
Description
More Details
| Type | Book |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 9781498537957 |
| ISBN10 | 1498537952 |
| Number Of Pages | 266 |
| Item Weight | 572 g |
| Product Dimensions | 161 x 232 x 25 mm |
| Publisher / Reseller | Bloomsbury Publishing Plc |
| Format | hardback |
Media Reviews
This collection of explorations into the manner and purpose of American philosophers’ reading of Scripture pushes back against trends in academic philosophy that seek to block this path of inquiry. The authors investigate the question with acuity, inventiveness, and care, such that the reader wants to learn more about the philosophers, previously known or unknown, whose use of Scripture has gone unnoticed or ignored. The book is a welcome invitation to a rich and longer conversation. -- Seth Vannatta, professor and chair, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies, Morgan State University
American Philosophers Read Scripture breaks down the old reason versus revelation debate surrounding scriptural interpretation by showing how American philosophers—regardless of theological tradition or religious orientation—used scripture as evidence for arguments or as inspirational starting-points of musement and action. It also highlights the critical role that reading plays in the life of those who write, be it Biblical texts or not. It also works at a meta-level, as astute philosophy and religion scholars read scripture along with those classic American scholars who read scripture. The book reminds us that the philosophical life extends into whatever text we read. -- Brad Elliott Stone, Loyola Marymount University
Surprising—I am delighted but surprised by the subject of this book. I had agreed to blurb the book because I think so highly of its editor, but I confess I thought the topic to be "one off." But these are wonderful essays that not only through light on largely ignored American philosophers (Bugbee) but just as important we learn how scripture can be read in constructive manner. I cannot recommend this book highly enough because it turns out the subject is not only interesting but significant for how to go on philosophically. -- Stanley Hauerwas, Duke University Divinity School
Author's Bio
Jacob L. Goodson is assistant professor of philosophy at Southwestern College.