Introduction
Part I: Theology and the Political
1. The Reunification of Theology and Comparison in the New
Comparative Theology
2. The Modern Quest to Depoliticize Theology
3. From Apologetics to Comparison: Towards a Dialectical Model of
Comparative Theology
Part II: Mysticism East and West Revisited
4. Mysticism East and West as Christian Apologetic
5. God and the God beyond God in Eckhart and ÍaSkara
6. From Acosmism to Dialectic: ÍaSkara and Eckhart on the
Ontological Status of the Phenomenal World
7. Liberative Knowledge as ''Living without a Why''
Conclusion
Hugh Nicholson is Assistant Professor of Theology at Loyola University Chicago. He has published on a wide range of topics in the study of theology and religion, including method in comparative theology, the relation between theology and the study of religion, and selected topics in classical Indian philosophy.
"This book is going to disrupt (I expect) and redirect (I hope) the
contemporary, often contorted, discussion on how scholars and/or
believers are to deal with religious diversity. In a carefully
crafted, broadly informed argument, Nicholson sounds his warning
that whether one is a scholar of religious studies or a comparative
theologian, to neglect the political element in all religious
identities is to imperil not only oneself but the religious
other.
Nicholson's theoretical case is made all the more convincing when
he applies it to a creative and exciting analysis of Rudolf Otto's
classic Mysticism East and West. This book will be much talked
about. (I'm
sure)."
--Paul F. Knitter, Paul Tillich Professor of Theology, World
Religions, and Culture, Union Theological Seminary, New York
"A clarion call to contemporary theologians and comparativists of
every stripe to examine -- and acknowledge -- the inescapably
normative, political and agonistic nature of our work. Rarely have
a commitment to theory and attention to the rich particularities of
comparative study been so skilfully brought together in a single
volume."
--Reid B. Locklin, Associate Professor, Christianity and Culture,
St. Michael's College, University of Toronto
"Nicholson offers an insightful overview of the origins and
development of comparative theology in its historical and political
context, demonstrating that recent comparative theology shares more
with its 19th-century namesake than is often
acknowledged."--Theological Studies
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