Produktbild: Towards an Ethics of Community

Towards an Ethics of Community Negotiations of Difference in a Pluralist Society

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

25.02.2000

Herausgeber

James Olthuis

Verlag

Wilfrid Laurier University Press

Seitenzahl

240

Maße (L/B/H)

22.9/15.2/1.5 cm

Gewicht

363 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-88920-339-6

Beschreibung

Portrait

James H. Olthuis is a professor of Philosophical Theology and Ethics at the Institute for Christian Studies in Toronto, Canada, where he has taught since 1968. He rollerblades to work and is a psychotherapist in private practice.

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

25.02.2000

Herausgeber

James Olthuis

Verlag

Wilfrid Laurier University Press

Seitenzahl

240

Maße (L/B/H)

22.9/15.2/1.5 cm

Gewicht

363 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-88920-339-6

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Towards an Ethics of Community
  • Table of Contents for
    Towards an Ethics of Community: Negotiations of Difference in a Pluralist Society, edited by James H. Olthius

    Acknowledgements

    Introduction: Exclusions and Inclusions: Dilemmas of Difference | James H. Olthius

    Part I: Dilemmas of Difference

    Plotting the Margins: A Historical Episode in the Management of Social Plurality | Robert Sweetman

    Consequences of Liberalism: Ideological Domination in Rorty's Public/Private Split | Hendrik Hart

    Indoctrination and Assimilation in Plural Settings | Ken Badley

    "Woman" in the Plural: Negotiating Sameness and Difference in Feminist Theory | Janet Catherina Wesselius

    Religious Conflicts, Public Policy, and Moral Authority: Reflections on Christian Faith and Homosexual Rights in a Plural Society | Hendrik Hart

    Rethinking the Family: Belonging, Respecting, and Connecting | James H. Olthius

    Part II: Negotiations of Difference

    Female Genital Mutilation: An Examination of a Harmful Traditional Practice in a Canadian Context | Lisa Chisholm-Smith

    Violent Asymmetry: The Shape of Power in the Current Debate over the Morality of Homosexuality | Ronald A. Kuipers

    Native Self-government: Between the Spiritual Fire and the Political Fire | George Vandervelde

    On Identity and Aesthetic Voice of the Culturally Displaced | Calvin Seerveld


    Notes on Contributors

    Subject Index

    Name Index

    Notes on Contributors

    Ken Badley served as the senior member in educational foundations at the Institute for Christian Studies from 1992-96. He now teaches social studies and ethics at a Christian secondary school and carries on research as a visiting research scholar at King's University College in Edmonton, Alberta.

    Lisa Chisholm-Smith completed her master's thesis at the Institute for Christian Studies on the subject of menstruation in Western society and has a keen interest in women's studies. She lives in the village of Bath and directs a regionally based program of adult Christian education for the Anglican Church of Canada in eastern Ontario.

    Hendrik Hart is professor of philosophy at the Institute for Christian Studies, where he has taught since 1966. He has published Communal Certainty and Authorized Truth; Understanding Our World; Setting Our Sights by the Morning Star; and (with Kai Nielsen) Search for Truth in a Withering Tradition.

    Ronald A. Kuipers is a Ph.D. candidate in philosophy in the joint doctoral program of the Vrije Universiteit (Free University) in Amsterdam and the Institute for Christian Studies in Toronto. He is the author of Solidarity and the Stranger: Themes in the Social Philosophy of Richard Rorty (1997) and coeditor of Walking the Tightrope of Faith: Philosophical Conversations about Reason and Religion (1999). He is concentrating on contemporary understandings of truth, rationality, and language, especially as these bear upon the themes of cultural pluralism and interreligious dialogue in the philosophy of religion.

    James H. Olthius is professor of philosophical theology at the Institute for Christian Studies, where he has taught since 1968. He is the author of Facts, Values and Ethics; I Pledge You My Troth; Keeping Our Troth: Staying in Love During the Five Stages of Marriage; A Hermeneutics of Ultimacy: Peril or Promise; and recently edited Knowing Other-wise: Philosophy at the Threshold of Spirituality. He is also a psychotherapist in private practice in Toronto.

    Calvin Seerveld is emeritated professor of philosophical aesthetics at the Institute for Christian Studies in Toronto. He was co-chair, 1984-1987, of the Canadian Society for Aesthetics when it was founded. His special interest is the methodology of art historiography, and his hobby is wisdom literature of the Older Testament.

    Robert Sweetman is professor in the history of philosophy at the Institute for Christian Studies specializing in medieval philosophy, in particular, scholastic moral philosophy of the thirteenth century. His publications focus on the intersection of moral philosophical ideas and pastoral care, medieval hermeneutics, spirituality, and preaching.

    George Vandervelde is professor of systematic theology at the Institute for Christian Studies. He has published in the areas of contemporary Roman Catholic theology, ecclesiology, and ecumenical hermeneutics. He co-chairs a consultation between the Roman Catholic Church and the World Evangelical Fellowship, and is a member of the Faith and Order Commissions of the Canadian Council of Churches, and the National Council of Churches of Christ, USA.

    Janet Catherina Wesselius is a Ph.D. candidate in philosophy in the joint doctoral program of the Vrije Universiteit (Free University) in Amsterdam and the Institute for Christian Studies in Toronto. She is completing a dissertation on notions of objectivity in feminist epistemology. She teaches courses in feminist philosophy, women's studies, and religious studies, and has published several articles on feminist philosophy.