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Giving Beyond the Gift by Elliot R. Wolfson, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters

From Elliot R. Wolfson

Current price: $179.99
Giving Beyond the Gift by Elliot R. Wolfson, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters
Giving Beyond the Gift by Elliot R. Wolfson, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters

Coles

Giving Beyond the Gift by Elliot R. Wolfson, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters

From Elliot R. Wolfson

Current price: $179.99
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Size: 25.4 x 234.95 x 1

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This book explores the co-dependency of monotheism and idolatry by examining the thought of several prominent twentieth-century Jewish philosophers Cohen, Buber, Rosenzweig, and Levinas. While all of these thinkers were keenly aware of the pitfalls of scriptural theism, to differing degreesthey each succumbed to the temptation to personify transcendence, even as they tried either to circumvent or to restrain it by apophatically purging kataphatic descriptions of the deity. Derrida and Wyschogrod, by contrast, carried the project of denegation one step further, embarking on a path thatculminated in the aporetic suspension of belief and the consequent removal of all images from God, a move that seriously compromises the viability of devotional piety. The inquiry into apophasis, transcendence, and immanence in these Jewish thinkers is symptomatic of a larger question. Recent attempts to harness the apophatic tradition to construct a viable postmodern negative theology, a religion without religion, are not radical enough. Not only are thesephilosophies of transcendence guilty of a turn to theology that defies the phenomenological presupposition of an immanent phenomenality, but they fall short on their own terms, inasmuch as they persist in employing metaphorical language that personalizes transcendence and thereby runs the risk ofundermining the irreducible alterity and invisibility attributed to the transcendent other. The logic of apophasis, if permitted to run its course fully, would exceed the need to posit some form of transcendence that is not ultimately a facet of immanence. Apophatic theologies, accordingly, must be supplanted by a more far-reaching apophasis that surpasses the theolatrous impulse lyingcoiled at the crux of theism, an apophasis of apophasis, based on accepting an absolute nothingness to be distinguished from the nothingness of an absolute that does not signify the unknowable One but rather the manifold that is the pleromatic abyss at being's core. Hence, the much-celebrated metaphor of the gift must give way to the more neutral and less theologically charged notion of an unconditional givenness in which the distinction between giver and given collapses. To think givenness in its most elemental, phenomenological sense is to allow the apparentto appear as given without presuming a causal agency that would turn that given into a gift. | Giving Beyond the Gift by Elliot R. Wolfson, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters

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