Cornelio Fabro A Biographical Chronological And Thematic Profile From Unpublished Documents Archived Notes And Testimonials


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Cornelio Fabro: A Biographical, Chronological, and Thematic Profile from Unpublished Documents, Archived Notes, and Testimonials


Cornelio Fabro: A Biographical, Chronological, and Thematic Profile from Unpublished Documents, Archived Notes, and Testimonials

Author: Rosa Goglia

language: en

Publisher: IVE Press

Release Date: 2023-01-04


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Cornelio Fabro, a Stigmatine priest, is one of the most important philosophers of the 20th century. He was born in Flumignano on August 24, 1911. For decades he undertook an exemplary pastoral apostolate in the parish Santa Croce al Flaminio (Rome) while simultaneously dedicating himself to the intensive work of teaching at numerous universities, both pontifical and public. Fabro was internationally recognized for his Thomistic studies, characterized by a historic-critical re-thinking of the texts of Saint Thomas from

Cornelio Fabro


Cornelio Fabro

Author: Rosa Goglia

language: en

Publisher:

Release Date: 2023-05


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The English translation of Sister Rosa Goglia's biography of the Italian priest, philosopher, and theologian.

Nietzsche’s Writing Against Religion and the Crisis of Faith


Nietzsche’s Writing Against Religion and the Crisis of Faith

Author: Paul Bishop

language: en

Publisher: Springer Nature

Release Date: 2024-09-06


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This book offers an exercise in reception theory and investigates the key figures in the reception of Nietzsche’s critique of Judeo-Christianity in the course of the twentieth century. It has often been remarked upon — but rarely, if ever, explained — why Nietzsche, the author of the famous parable in The Gay Science in which a madman announces the “death of God” and a self-proclaimed opponent of organised religion, should have been a figure of such profound interest to writers, thinkers and theologians who were of a Christian persuasion. In order better to understand the attractiveness of Nietzsche to practitioners of faith, this book undertakes an analytical study of the reception of Nietzsche by around a dozen writers and thinkers working within the discourse of twentieth-century theology in the European tradition (French, Italian, German, Polish, and Swiss).