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Prayer --- Faith. --- Religious belief --- Theological belief --- Belief and doubt --- Religion --- Salvation --- Theological virtues --- Trust in God --- Christianity. --- Faith --- #GGSB: Gebed --- #GGSB: Geestelijke lezing (geel) --- Christianity --- Religious studies --- Gebed --- Geestelijke lezing (geel)
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Cet ouvrage entend initier au mystère chrétien, c'est-à-dire à l'ensemble des éléments qui constituent la profession de foi des chrétiens, sous la forme d'un commentaire libre de leur "Credo". Ces "promenades" s'arrêtent pour commencer à la Foi et à la Révélation, ainsi qu'à la théologie fondamentale qui en fait ses objets d'étude. Elles abordent ensuite Jésus le Christ, Dieu Trinité, l'Eglise, les Sacrements, la Création et l'Au-delà qui font l'objet de la théologie dogmatique. Elles pourront ainsi intéresser celles et ceux qui souhaitent découvrir ce que croient les chrétiens.
Theology, Doctrinal. --- Faith. --- Religious belief --- Theological belief --- Belief and doubt --- Religion --- Salvation --- Theological virtues --- Trust in God --- Christian doctrines --- Christianity --- Doctrinal theology --- Doctrines, Christian --- Dogmatic theology --- Fundamental theology --- Systematic theology --- Theology, Dogmatic --- Theology, Systematic --- Theology --- Doctrines --- 2:001 --- 2:001 Theologie als wetenschap. Studie en methode van de theologie --- Theologie als wetenschap. Studie en methode van de theologie --- Theology, Doctrinal --- Faith
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Married people --- Mortality. --- Faith. --- Life change events --- Spiritual life. --- Religious aspects. --- Weber, Matt --- Health. --- Religious belief --- Theological belief --- Belief and doubt --- Religion --- Salvation --- Theological virtues --- Trust in God --- Mortality, Law of --- Death --- Demography --- Death (Biology) --- Married couples --- Married persons --- People, Married --- Persons, Married --- Couples --- Marital status --- Spouses
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In this book the author argues that the Falasifa, the Philosophers of the Islamic Golden Age, are usefully interpreted through the prism of the contemporary, western ethics of belief. He contends that their position amounts to what he calls ‘Moderate Evidentialism’ – that only for the epistemic elite what one ought to believe is determined by one’s evidence. The author makes the case that the Falasifa’s position is well argued, ingeniously circumvents issues in the epistemology of testimony, and is well worth taking seriously in the contemporary debate. He reasons that this is especially the case since the position has salutary consequences for how to respond to the sceptic, and for how we are to conceive of extremist belief. Anthony Robert Booth is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Sussex, UK. He also works for Trusting Banks, a NWO (Dutch Science Foundation) funded collaboration between the Universities of Groningen, the Netherlands, and Cambridge, UK. He has worked mainly on issues at the intersection of ethics and epistemology, and has published articles appearing in such journals as Journal of Philosophy, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research and Synthese. He also co-edited Intuitions (2014).
Philosophy. --- Islam. --- Epistemology. --- Ethics. --- Religion --- Philosophy, Asian. --- Moral Philosophy. --- Non-Western Philosophy. --- Philosophy of Religion. --- Islamic philosophy. --- Faith --- Moral and ethical aspects. --- Religious belief --- Theological belief --- Arabic philosophy --- Muslim philosophy --- Philosophy, Islamic --- Philosophy, Arab --- Belief and doubt --- Salvation --- Theological virtues --- Trust in God --- Genetic epistemology. --- Mental philosophy --- Humanities --- Mohammedanism --- Muhammadanism --- Muslimism --- Mussulmanism --- Religions --- Muslims --- Developmental psychology --- Knowledge, Theory of --- Asian philosophy --- Oriental philosophy --- Philosophy, Oriental --- Deontology --- Ethics, Primitive --- Ethology --- Moral philosophy --- Morality --- Morals --- Philosophy, Moral --- Science, Moral --- Philosophy --- Values --- Religion—Philosophy. --- Epistemology --- Theory of knowledge --- Psychology
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Faith --- Religious belief --- Theological belief --- Belief and doubt --- Religion --- Salvation --- Theological virtues --- Trust in God --- Greece --- al-Yūnān --- Ancient Greece --- Ellada --- Ellas --- Ellēnikē Dēmokratia --- Elliniki Dimokratia --- Grčija --- Grèce --- Grecia --- Gret︠s︡ii︠a︡ --- Griechenland --- Hellada --- Hellas --- Hellenic Republic --- Hellēnikē Dēmokratia --- Kingdom of Greece --- République hellénique --- Royaume de Grèce --- Vasileion tēs Hellados --- Xila --- Yaṿan --- Yūnān --- Ελληνική Δημοκρατία --- Ελλάς --- Ελλάδα --- Греция --- اليونان --- يونان --- 希腊 --- History --- Religion. --- Greece. --- History.
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"Heidegger has often been considered as the proponent of the end of metaphysics in the post-Hegelian philosophy, due to his persistent attempts to overcome the onto-theological framework of traditional metaphysics. Yet, this dismissal of metaphysical, theological, and religious motives is deeply ambiguous since new forms of metaphysical and religious experience re-emerge in his philosophical works. Heidegger shares this ambiguous relation to the notions of faith and religion with authors such as Nietzsche and Wittgenstein whose works are also marked by a critique of metaphysics and by a characteristic rethinking of the role of faith and religion. In fact, all three still remain, among other things, reference points for contemporary philosophical debates relating to the phenomenon of religion and faith. Rethinking Faith explores how the phenomena of religion and faith are present in the works of Heidegger, Nietzsche, and Wittgenstein, and how these phenomena are brought into play in their discussion of the classical metaphysical motives they criticize."--Bloomsbury Publishing.
Metaphysics --- Religious studies --- Heidegger, Martin --- Nietzsche, Friedrich --- Wittgenstein, Ludwig J.J. --- Wittgenstein, Ludwig --- Faith --- Religion --- Philosophy --- Heidegger, Martin, --- Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm, --- Wittgenstein, Ludwig, --- Faith. --- Religion. --- Metaphysics. --- God --- Ontology --- Philosophy of mind --- Religion, Primitive --- Atheism --- Irreligion --- Religions --- Theology --- Religious belief --- Theological belief --- Belief and doubt --- Salvation --- Theological virtues --- Trust in God --- Wei-tʻe-ken-ssu-tʻan, --- Wei-tʻe-ken-ssu-tʻan, Lu-te-wei-hsi, --- Wittgenstein, L. --- Vitgenshteĭn, L., --- Wei-ken-ssu-tʻan, --- Pitʻŭgensyutʻain, --- Vitgenshteĭn, Li︠u︡dvig, --- Weitegenshitan, --- Wittgenstein, Ludovicus, --- Vitgenshtaĭn, Ludvig, --- ויטגנשטיין, לודוויג --- 维特根斯坦, --- Wittgenstein, Ludwig Josef Johann, --- Nietzsche, Friederich --- Khaĭdegger, Martin, --- Haĭdegger, Martin, --- Hīdajar, Mārtin, --- Hai-te-ko, --- Haidegŏ, --- Chaitenger, Martinos, --- Chaitenker, Martinos, --- Chaintenger, Martin, --- Khaĭdeger, Martin, --- Hai-te-ko-erh, --- Haideger, Marṭinn, --- Heidegger, M. --- Haideger, Martin, --- Hajdeger, Martin, --- הייגדר, מרתין --- היידגר, מרטין --- היידגר, מרטין, --- 海德格尔, --- Chaintenker, Martin, --- Hāydigir, Mārtīn, --- Hīdigir, Mārtīn, --- هاىدگر, مارتين, --- هىدگر, مارتين, --- Heidegger, Martin, - 1889-1976 --- Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm, - 1844-1900 --- Wittgenstein, Ludwig, - 1889-1951
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