Lente d'ingrandimento
Search Loader

Andrew Dunstan 
Karl Barth’s Analogy of Beauty 
Its Basis and Implications for Theological Aesthetics

Supporto
This book provides the first comprehensive examination of Karl Barth’s view of beauty. For over fifty years, scholars have assumed Barth recovered traditional belief in God’s beauty but refused to entertain any relationship between this and more familiar natural and artistic beauties. Hans Urs von Balthasar was the first to offer this interpretation, and his conclusion has been echoed ever since, rendering Barth’s view of beauty irrelevant to work in theological aesthetics. This volume continues the late-twentieth-century revision of Balthasar’s interpretation of Barth by arguing that this too is a significant misunderstanding of his theology. Andrew Dunstan demonstrates that, through an encounter with fatalistic forms of Reformed theology, Brunner’s charges that his dogmatics were irrelevant and medieval thought, Barth gradually developed an analogy of divine, ecclesial and worldly beauty with all the theological, christocentric and actualistic hallmarks of his previous forms of analogy. This not only yields valuable new insight into Barth’s view of analogy but also provides a much-needed foundation for a distinctively Protestant and post-Barthian approach to theological aesthetics.
€50.25
Modalità di pagamento
Lingua Inglese ● Formato EPUB ● Pagine 248 ● ISBN 9781000517125 ● Casa editrice Taylor and Francis ● Pubblicato 2021 ● Scaricabile 3 volte ● Moneta EUR ● ID 8241297 ● Protezione dalla copia Adobe DRM
Richiede un lettore di ebook compatibile con DRM

Altri ebook dello stesso autore / Editore

46.563 Ebook in questa categoria