0.0/5
363,00 kr
Lacoste establishes a conception of human nature that opens possibilities for religious experience and religious identity in view of Heideggers profound challenge. He develops a phenomenology of the liturgy, and subjects the categories of 'experience,' 'place,' and 'human existence' to careful examination. Making a strong case for the affective nature of religious experience, he sides with Schleiermacher against Hegel in associating religion with affectivity rather than logic. Such affectivity, he claims, can be more rational than reason as framed in Hegelian logic.