
"Original and provocative, Between Faith and Thought provides an important critique of the widespread view that the task of philosophical theology is to overcome ontotheology. Offering a new paradigm, Robbins successfully outflanks the conseravtive and radical divide."
Edith Wyschogrod, Rice University
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Between Faith and Thought:
An Essay on the Ontotheological Condition
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| by Jeffrey W. Robbins |
| 224 pages, 6 x 9 |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2163-5 $42.50 |
| Studies in Religion
and Culture |
 |
The ontotheological problem is perhaps the defining issue of contemporary philosophical theology, as it
reveals that dimension of thought where reason and faith are indivisible and indissolublewhere
philosophy recognizes its faith in reason and theology realizes its responsibility to thought.
In Between Faith and Thought Jeffrey W. Robbins argues that ontotheology, far from being a problem
to overcome, is instead the very condition of being and thought. Further, he asks, how might this ontotheological
condition be thought of as a resource for creative and responsible engagement with the world? Robbins calls for a
radical rethinking of contemporary philosophical theology, based upon the ethical insights of Emmanuel Levinas,
that effectively redraws the boundaries between philosophy and theology and suggests an alternative relationship
between faith and thought.
Structured as a dialogue between the continental philosophical tradition represented by such thinkers as Husserl,
Heidegger, Kristeva, and Ricoeur and the contemporary theological tradition expressed by such figures as Barth,
Bonhoeffer, and Marion, Robbins' lucidly argued work models a new, more cooperative and less antagonistic style
for contemporary philosophical theology. It also engages various facets of contemporary society to show how this
new style and understanding of philosophical theology might function as a critical and constructive tool of cultural
analysis.
Jeffrey W. Robbins, Assistant Professor of Religion and Philosophy at Lebanon Valley College and Associate
Editor for the Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory, is completing his next book, In Search of a
Non-Dogmatic Theology.
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