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DAVID TRACY
David Tracy was born in 1939 in Yonkers, New York. A noted Roman Catholic teacher, scholar, priest and theologian, he received his licentiate (1964) and doctorate (1969) at Gregorian University in Rome. From 1967 to 1969 Tracy taught at Catholic University of America, his first teaching assignment. He then moved to the University of Chicago Divinity School, where he was namedDistinguished
MARY BEARD - THE GIFFORD LECTURES Mary Beard is one of Britain’s best-known classicists, Professor at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Newnham College. She has written numerous books on the ancient world including the Wolfson Prize-winning Pompeii: The Life of a Roman Town; has presented highly-acclaimed TV series, Meet the Romans and Rome: Empire without Limit; and is a regular broadcaster and media commentator. ALLAN DOUGLAS GALLOWAY Allan Douglas Galloway was Professor of Divinity at Glasgow University. He gave the Kerr Lectures at Glasgow University in 1966 and he delivered a series of Gifford Lectures in 1983–1984 also at Glasgow. His publications include The Cosmic Christ Basic Readings in Theology (editor 1964); Faith in a Changing Culture Kerr lectures delivered at Glasgow University (1966); a volume coedited with THE GIFFORD LECTURES The prestigious Gifford Lectureships were established by Adam Lord Gifford (1820–1887), a senator of the College of Justice in Scotland. The purpose of Lord Gifford's bequest to the universities of Edinburgh, Glasgow, St. Andrews and Aberdeen was to sponsor lectures to “promote and diffuse the study of Natural Theology in the widest sense of the term—in other words, the knowledge of God”. WHAT IS NATURAL THEOLOGY? Traditionally natural theology is the term used for the attempt to prove the existence of God and divine purpose through observation of nature and the use of human reason. Seen in a more positive light natural theology is the part of theology that does not depend on revelation. To the extent "revealed theology," which presupposes that God and divine purposes are not open to human understanding THE EDGE OF WORDS: GOD AND THE HABITS OF LANGUAGE The Edge of Words: God and the Habits of Language. “Does the way we talk as human beings tell us anything about God?”. In The Edge of Words, the product of his 2013 Gifford Lectures, Rowan Williams explores the ways in which “ordinary language” gestures in the direction of what he refers to as a “hinterland” of meaning. SCIENCE AND SALVATION Science as Salvation looks at the development of beliefs regarding the nature of our world, our future, our origins and our outlook on life through the changing views about natural sciences, specifically physics. As our understanding of the nature of physical matter has changed, combined with a hypothesized need for faith and a worldview dependent on faith, human understanding of life and ILLEGAL BUT LEGITIMATE: A DUBIOUS DOCTRINE Illegal but Legitimate: A Dubious Doctrine. The 2004–2005 Gifford Lectures were originally to be delivered by Professor Edward Said. His untimely death in September 2003 meant that the Gifford Lectures were given by Dame Margaret Anstee, Dr. Stephen Toulmin and Professor Noam Chomsky in memory of Professor Said. FACING GAIA: EIGHT LECTURES ON THE NEW CLIMATIC REGIME Facing Gaia: Eight Lectures on the New Climatic Regime. Lecture: Facing Gaia: A New Enquiry Into Natural Religion. Polity. 2017. Summary. In this extended reworking of his Gifford Lectures, noted anthropologist and pioneer of the field of science and technology studies Bruno Latour turns his attention to the pressing matter of climate catastrophe. 5: BONJOURIAN COHERENTISM Coherentism pure and unalloyed shows little promise; but it is important not to leave matters at such an abstract level. Any real, flesh-and-blood coherentist will have her own particular insights; she will make modifications, adaptations, qualifications, and additions; problems, difficulties, and inadequacies of coherentism überhaupt might not afflict certain developments of it.DAVID TRACY
David Tracy was born in 1939 in Yonkers, New York. A noted Roman Catholic teacher, scholar, priest and theologian, he received his licentiate (1964) and doctorate (1969) at Gregorian University in Rome. From 1967 to 1969 Tracy taught at Catholic University of America, his first teaching assignment. He then moved to the University of Chicago Divinity School, where he was namedDistinguished
MARY BEARD - THE GIFFORD LECTURES Mary Beard is one of Britain’s best-known classicists, Professor at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Newnham College. She has written numerous books on the ancient world including the Wolfson Prize-winning Pompeii: The Life of a Roman Town; has presented highly-acclaimed TV series, Meet the Romans and Rome: Empire without Limit; and is a regular broadcaster and media commentator. ALLAN DOUGLAS GALLOWAY Allan Douglas Galloway was Professor of Divinity at Glasgow University. He gave the Kerr Lectures at Glasgow University in 1966 and he delivered a series of Gifford Lectures in 1983–1984 also at Glasgow. His publications include The Cosmic Christ Basic Readings in Theology (editor 1964); Faith in a Changing Culture Kerr lectures delivered at Glasgow University (1966); a volume coedited with NEWS & ANNOUNCEMENTS John Polkinghorne, Anglican priest and respected theoretical physicist, has passed away at the age of 90. The news of his death was shared by Queens' College, Cambridge, where he served as presidentfrom 1988 to 1996.
LECTURES - THE GIFFORD LECTURES In the published version of his lectures, New Theories of Everything, John D. Barrow makes reference to having delivered the Gifford Lectures at Glasgow in January 1988, but there are several references elsewhere to him delivering the Gifford Lectures in 1989 (e.g. Templeton Prize, "Fact Sheet for John D. Barrow"). WHAT IS NATURAL THEOLOGY? Traditionally natural theology is the term used for the attempt to prove the existence of God and divine purpose through observation of nature and the use of human reason. Seen in a more positive light natural theology is the part of theology that does not depend on revelation. To the extent "revealed theology," which presupposes that God and divine purposes are not open to human understanding AUTHORITY IN THE EARLY CHURCH Chadwick opens with two lectures on the ‘vicars of Christ’. The authority of Christ is self-evident to his disciples. With the power of the keys, entrusted to Peter, authority is delegated to all the apostles, and to the entire Church. After Christ’s ascension, the locus of authority is not likely to have been obvious. The difficulty of defining apostleship is in part connected with the THE QUEST FOR CERTAINTY The Quest for Certainty addresses the relationship between philosophy’s theories of knowledge and scientific discoveries in the natural world. Dewey argues that philosophy has failed in its modern sense to properly engage and rationalise the division between scientific advancement and its own theories of knowledge. He advocates that a process of ‘experimental inquiry’ should be enlisted SCIENCE AND SALVATION Science as Salvation looks at the development of beliefs regarding the nature of our world, our future, our origins and our outlook on life through the changing views about natural sciences, specifically physics. As our understanding of the nature of physical matter has changed, combined with a hypothesized need for faith and a worldview dependent on faith, human understanding of life and PROFESSOR MCCAULEY TO DELIVER IN 2020-2021 Robert N. McCauley, the William Rand Kenan Jr. University Professor of Philosophy at Emory College of Arts and Sciences, has been invited to be a Gifford Lecturer at the University of Aberdeen in 2020-2021. More Information will be posted as it becomes available.THE SELF AS AGENT
Macmurray’s primary criticism of the Western philosophical tradition is that it begins from a theoretical, rather from than a practical, standpoint. In The Self as Agent, he critiques and corrects Descartes’ ‘I think’ with the ‘I do’, a construction of the Self existing first and foremost as an agent of action in the world. In chapter 1, ‘The Crisis of the Personal’, heREALMS OF VALUE
In Realms of Value Perry discusses the fields of philosophy of the natural and social sciences, aesthetics, philosophy of education, and philosophy of religion in the context of the “realms” of value. The task of his study is to bring unity and order into these areas, relying on a fundamental definition of value, defining it as any interest in any object. INTERRELIGIOUS THEOLOGY: THE FUTURE SHAPE OF THEOLOGY Interreligious theology rests on four cardinal principles: It extends to the religious other a theological credit of trust and relies, against some postmodern trends, on the unity of reality. It is located in interreligious discourse and is of a processual, open-ended nature. For the remainder, the lecture deals with methodological issues. THE GIFFORD LECTURES The prestigious Gifford Lectureships were established by Adam Lord Gifford (1820–1887), a senator of the College of Justice in Scotland. The purpose of Lord Gifford's bequest to the universities of Edinburgh, Glasgow, St. Andrews and Aberdeen was to sponsor lectures to “promote and diffuse the study of Natural Theology in the widest sense of the term—in other words, the knowledge of God”. WHAT IS NATURAL THEOLOGY? Traditionally natural theology is the term used for the attempt to prove the existence of God and divine purpose through observation of nature and the use of human reason. Seen in a more positive light natural theology is the part of theology that does not depend on revelation. To the extent "revealed theology," which presupposes that God and divine purposes are not open to human understanding FOUNDATIONS OF ETHICS Ross’s series of lectures, The Foundations of Ethics, has as its starting point an acknowledgement of the moral consciousness, and proceeds to pursue a critical study of it in light of the two main moral theories.Ross asserts that the main strands found in common moral opinions are the idea of morality as obedience to laws and the notion that moral action is concerned with obtaining goods. THE QUEST FOR CERTAINTY The Quest for Certainty addresses the relationship between philosophy’s theories of knowledge and scientific discoveries in the natural world. Dewey argues that philosophy has failed in its modern sense to properly engage and rationalise the division between scientific advancement and its own theories of knowledge. He advocates that a process of ‘experimental inquiry’ should be enlisted RELIGION AND THE RISE OF WESTERN CULTURE As the first half of a two-year series, these lectures concern the Christian cultural history of Europe with a level of detail which the lectures on 'Religion and Culture' (1947) could not accommodate. They focus on the Roman adoption of Christianity and the influence of these developments on northern European culture during the early medieval period. As the second half of a two-year lecture FACING GAIA: EIGHT LECTURES ON THE NEW CLIMATIC REGIME Facing Gaia: Eight Lectures on the New Climatic Regime. Lecture: Facing Gaia: A New Enquiry Into Natural Religion. Polity. 2017. Summary. In this extended reworking of his Gifford Lectures, noted anthropologist and pioneer of the field of science and technology studies Bruno Latour turns his attention to the pressing matter of climate catastrophe. FACING GAIA: A NEW ENQUIRY INTO NATURAL RELIGION There could be no better theme for a lecture series on natural religion than that of Gaia, this puzzling figure that has emerged recently in public discourse from Earth science as well as from many activist and spiritual movements. The problem is that the expression of "natural religion" is somewhat of a pleonasm, since Western definitions of nature borrow so much from theology. ILLEGAL BUT LEGITIMATE: A DUBIOUS DOCTRINE Illegal but Legitimate: A Dubious Doctrine. The 2004–2005 Gifford Lectures were originally to be delivered by Professor Edward Said. His untimely death in September 2003 meant that the Gifford Lectures were given by Dame Margaret Anstee, Dr. Stephen Toulmin and Professor Noam Chomsky in memory of Professor Said. 5: BONJOURIAN COHERENTISM Coherentism pure and unalloyed shows little promise; but it is important not to leave matters at such an abstract level. Any real, flesh-and-blood coherentist will have her own particular insights; she will make modifications, adaptations, qualifications, and additions; problems, difficulties, and inadequacies of coherentism überhaupt might not afflict certain developments of it. 26: AUGUSTINE ON LUST AND THE WILL PART IV: From Stoic Agitations to Christian Temptations 26: Augustine on Lust and the Will Augustine's views on sexual desire have been very well studied and on them I shall do little more than convey what others have said. But beyond that I should like to draw attention to some of the replies by Bishop Julian of Eclanum. Augustine's case against lust centred on the idea of the will. THE GIFFORD LECTURES The prestigious Gifford Lectureships were established by Adam Lord Gifford (1820–1887), a senator of the College of Justice in Scotland. The purpose of Lord Gifford's bequest to the universities of Edinburgh, Glasgow, St. Andrews and Aberdeen was to sponsor lectures to “promote and diffuse the study of Natural Theology in the widest sense of the term—in other words, the knowledge of God”. WHAT IS NATURAL THEOLOGY? Traditionally natural theology is the term used for the attempt to prove the existence of God and divine purpose through observation of nature and the use of human reason. Seen in a more positive light natural theology is the part of theology that does not depend on revelation. To the extent "revealed theology," which presupposes that God and divine purposes are not open to human understanding FOUNDATIONS OF ETHICS Ross’s series of lectures, The Foundations of Ethics, has as its starting point an acknowledgement of the moral consciousness, and proceeds to pursue a critical study of it in light of the two main moral theories.Ross asserts that the main strands found in common moral opinions are the idea of morality as obedience to laws and the notion that moral action is concerned with obtaining goods. THE QUEST FOR CERTAINTY The Quest for Certainty addresses the relationship between philosophy’s theories of knowledge and scientific discoveries in the natural world. Dewey argues that philosophy has failed in its modern sense to properly engage and rationalise the division between scientific advancement and its own theories of knowledge. He advocates that a process of ‘experimental inquiry’ should be enlisted RELIGION AND THE RISE OF WESTERN CULTURE As the first half of a two-year series, these lectures concern the Christian cultural history of Europe with a level of detail which the lectures on 'Religion and Culture' (1947) could not accommodate. They focus on the Roman adoption of Christianity and the influence of these developments on northern European culture during the early medieval period. As the second half of a two-year lecture FACING GAIA: EIGHT LECTURES ON THE NEW CLIMATIC REGIME Facing Gaia: Eight Lectures on the New Climatic Regime. Lecture: Facing Gaia: A New Enquiry Into Natural Religion. Polity. 2017. Summary. In this extended reworking of his Gifford Lectures, noted anthropologist and pioneer of the field of science and technology studies Bruno Latour turns his attention to the pressing matter of climate catastrophe. FACING GAIA: A NEW ENQUIRY INTO NATURAL RELIGION There could be no better theme for a lecture series on natural religion than that of Gaia, this puzzling figure that has emerged recently in public discourse from Earth science as well as from many activist and spiritual movements. The problem is that the expression of "natural religion" is somewhat of a pleonasm, since Western definitions of nature borrow so much from theology. ILLEGAL BUT LEGITIMATE: A DUBIOUS DOCTRINE Illegal but Legitimate: A Dubious Doctrine. The 2004–2005 Gifford Lectures were originally to be delivered by Professor Edward Said. His untimely death in September 2003 meant that the Gifford Lectures were given by Dame Margaret Anstee, Dr. Stephen Toulmin and Professor Noam Chomsky in memory of Professor Said. 5: BONJOURIAN COHERENTISM Coherentism pure and unalloyed shows little promise; but it is important not to leave matters at such an abstract level. Any real, flesh-and-blood coherentist will have her own particular insights; she will make modifications, adaptations, qualifications, and additions; problems, difficulties, and inadequacies of coherentism überhaupt might not afflict certain developments of it. 26: AUGUSTINE ON LUST AND THE WILL PART IV: From Stoic Agitations to Christian Temptations 26: Augustine on Lust and the Will Augustine's views on sexual desire have been very well studied and on them I shall do little more than convey what others have said. But beyond that I should like to draw attention to some of the replies by Bishop Julian of Eclanum. Augustine's case against lust centred on the idea of the will. NEWS & ANNOUNCEMENTS John Polkinghorne, Anglican priest and respected theoretical physicist, has passed away at the age of 90. The news of his death was shared by Queens' College, Cambridge, where he served as presidentfrom 1988 to 1996.
LECTURES - THE GIFFORD LECTURES In the published version of his lectures, New Theories of Everything, John D. Barrow makes reference to having delivered the Gifford Lectures at Glasgow in January 1988, but there are several references elsewhere to him delivering the Gifford Lectures in 1989 (e.g. Templeton Prize, "Fact Sheet for John D. Barrow"). LECTURES - THE GIFFORD LECTURES From the University of Edinburgh: This lecture series explores the concept ‘in God's image’. Human existence, ranging ‘from dust to dust’ to ‘only a little lower than God’, challenges us to discern the moral, scientific, technological, and religious powers that human beings bring to bear most effectively within this broadspectrum.
LECTURES - THE GIFFORD LECTURES Lecture 1 - Introduction: murderous games. Monday 6 May 2019. This lecture introduces some of those moral and ethical dilemmas in studying the classical world, asking how we understand remote ancient cultures that have come to stand both for the pinnacle of "civilisation" and for the nadir of corruption and cruelty. THE MYSTERY OF BEING: REFLECTION AND MYSTERY Gabriel Marcel delivered two series of ten lectures on the ‘mystery of being’, comprised of ordered reflections on nature and the goal of philosophy from an existentialist standpoint. In the first volume, Reflection and Mystery, he explains that rather than proceeding by expounding a system, his philosophy proceeds in a fashion more akin toa journey.
GEORGE HENRIK VON WRIGHT The Finnish philosopher Georg Henrik von Wright, Gifford lecturer in 1959 and 1960, was one of the most prominent European philosophers of the 20th century. He was perhaps best known for his connections with Wittgenstein as student colleague and after the latter’s death as executor. Von Wright’s work much of which was greatly influenced by Wittgenstein included important writings on logic RELIGION AND THE RISE OF WESTERN CULTURE As the first half of a two-year series, these lectures concern the Christian cultural history of Europe with a level of detail which the lectures on 'Religion and Culture' (1947) could not accommodate. They focus on the Roman adoption of Christianity and the influence of these developments on northern European culture during the early medievalperiod.
INTERRELIGIOUS THEOLOGY: THE FUTURE SHAPE OF THEOLOGY Interreligious theology rests on four cardinal principles: It extends to the religious other a theological credit of trust and relies, against some postmodern trends, on the unity of reality. It is located in interreligious discourse and is of a processual, open-ended nature. For the remainder, the lecture deals with methodological issues. THE EDGE OF WORDS: GOD AND THE HABITS OF LANGUAGE The Edge of Words: God and the Habits of Language. “Does the way we talk as human beings tell us anything about God?”. In The Edge of Words, the product of his 2013 Gifford Lectures, Rowan Williams explores the ways in which “ordinary language” gestures in the direction of what he refers to as a “hinterland” of meaning. FACING GAIA: A NEW ENQUIRY INTO NATURAL RELIGION There could be no better theme for a lecture series on natural religion than that of Gaia, this puzzling figure that has emerged recently in public discourse from Earth science as well as from many activist and spiritual movements. The problem is that the expression of "natural religion" is somewhat of a pleonasm, since Western definitions of nature borrow so much from theology. THE GIFFORD LECTURES The prestigious Gifford Lectureships were established by Adam Lord Gifford (1820–1887), a senator of the College of Justice in Scotland. The purpose of Lord Gifford's bequest to the universities of Edinburgh, Glasgow, St. Andrews and Aberdeen was to sponsor lectures to “promote and diffuse the study of Natural Theology in the widest sense of the term—in other words, the knowledge of God”. LECTURES - THE GIFFORD LECTURES This lecture series explores the concept ‘in God's image’. Human existence, ranging ‘from dust to dust’ to ‘only a little lower than God’, challenges us to discern the moral, scientific, technological, and religious powers that human beings bring to bear most effectively within this broad spectrum. WHAT IS NATURAL THEOLOGY? Traditionally natural theology is the term used for the attempt to prove the existence of God and divine purpose through observation of nature and the use of human reason. Seen in a more positive light natural theology is the part of theology that does not depend on revelation. To the extent "revealed theology," which presupposes that God and divine purposes are not open to human understanding THE EVOLUTION OF THEOLOGY IN THE GREEK PHILOSOPHERS The Evolution of Theology in the Greek Philosophers gives an account of those ideas of Greek Philosophers which have decisively affected the subsequent development of theological thought. The selection of topics is confined mainly to the writings of Plato and Aristotle, to the main representatives of the Stoic philosophy, and to Philo and Plotinus among the Neo-Platonists. FACING GAIA: EIGHT LECTURES ON THE NEW CLIMATIC REGIME Facing Gaia: Eight Lectures on the New Climatic Regime. Lecture: Facing Gaia: A New Enquiry Into Natural Religion. Polity. 2017. Summary. In this extended reworking of his Gifford Lectures, noted anthropologist and pioneer of the field of science and technology studies Bruno Latour turns his attention to the pressing matter of climate catastrophe. ILLEGAL BUT LEGITIMATE: A DUBIOUS DOCTRINE Illegal but Legitimate: A Dubious Doctrine. The 2004–2005 Gifford Lectures were originally to be delivered by Professor Edward Said. His untimely death in September 2003 meant that the Gifford Lectures were given by Dame Margaret Anstee, Dr. Stephen Toulmin and Professor Noam Chomsky in memory of Professor Said.PERSONS IN RELATION
Persons in Relation presupposes the conclusions of The Self as Agent to complete Macmurray’s analysis of the form of the personal by establishing the Self as an agent constituted by his relationship to the Other, that is, by mutual relationships with other persons. Macmurray argues that an isolated agent is a self-contradiction because agency requires relationship with the Other as ALLAN DOUGLAS GALLOWAY Allan Douglas Galloway was Professor of Divinity at Glasgow University. He gave the Kerr Lectures at Glasgow University in 1966 and he delivered a series of Gifford Lectures in 1983–1984 also at Glasgow. His publications include The Cosmic Christ Basic Readings in Theology (editor 1964); Faith in a Changing Culture Kerr lectures delivered at Glasgow University (1966); a volume coedited withDAVID N. HEMPTON
David Hempton was appointed Dean of Harvard Divinity School in July 2012. Before joining the faculty of Divinity in spring 2007, he was university professor and professor of the History of Christianity at Boston University, and prior to that appointment, he was professor of Modern History and director of the School of History in Queen'sUniversity Belfast.
26: AUGUSTINE ON LUST AND THE WILL PART IV: From Stoic Agitations to Christian Temptations 26: Augustine on Lust and the Will Augustine's views on sexual desire have been very well studied and on them I shall do little more than convey what others have said. But beyond that I should like to draw attention to some of the replies by Bishop Julian of Eclanum. Augustine's case against lust centred on the idea of the will. THE GIFFORD LECTURES The prestigious Gifford Lectureships were established by Adam Lord Gifford (1820–1887), a senator of the College of Justice in Scotland. The purpose of Lord Gifford's bequest to the universities of Edinburgh, Glasgow, St. Andrews and Aberdeen was to sponsor lectures to “promote and diffuse the study of Natural Theology in the widest sense of the term—in other words, the knowledge of God”. LECTURES - THE GIFFORD LECTURES This lecture series explores the concept ‘in God's image’. Human existence, ranging ‘from dust to dust’ to ‘only a little lower than God’, challenges us to discern the moral, scientific, technological, and religious powers that human beings bring to bear most effectively within this broad spectrum. WHAT IS NATURAL THEOLOGY? Traditionally natural theology is the term used for the attempt to prove the existence of God and divine purpose through observation of nature and the use of human reason. Seen in a more positive light natural theology is the part of theology that does not depend on revelation. To the extent "revealed theology," which presupposes that God and divine purposes are not open to human understanding THE EVOLUTION OF THEOLOGY IN THE GREEK PHILOSOPHERS The Evolution of Theology in the Greek Philosophers gives an account of those ideas of Greek Philosophers which have decisively affected the subsequent development of theological thought. The selection of topics is confined mainly to the writings of Plato and Aristotle, to the main representatives of the Stoic philosophy, and to Philo and Plotinus among the Neo-Platonists. FACING GAIA: EIGHT LECTURES ON THE NEW CLIMATIC REGIME Facing Gaia: Eight Lectures on the New Climatic Regime. Lecture: Facing Gaia: A New Enquiry Into Natural Religion. Polity. 2017. Summary. In this extended reworking of his Gifford Lectures, noted anthropologist and pioneer of the field of science and technology studies Bruno Latour turns his attention to the pressing matter of climate catastrophe. ILLEGAL BUT LEGITIMATE: A DUBIOUS DOCTRINE Illegal but Legitimate: A Dubious Doctrine. The 2004–2005 Gifford Lectures were originally to be delivered by Professor Edward Said. His untimely death in September 2003 meant that the Gifford Lectures were given by Dame Margaret Anstee, Dr. Stephen Toulmin and Professor Noam Chomsky in memory of Professor Said.PERSONS IN RELATION
Persons in Relation presupposes the conclusions of The Self as Agent to complete Macmurray’s analysis of the form of the personal by establishing the Self as an agent constituted by his relationship to the Other, that is, by mutual relationships with other persons. Macmurray argues that an isolated agent is a self-contradiction because agency requires relationship with the Other as ALLAN DOUGLAS GALLOWAY Allan Douglas Galloway was Professor of Divinity at Glasgow University. He gave the Kerr Lectures at Glasgow University in 1966 and he delivered a series of Gifford Lectures in 1983–1984 also at Glasgow. His publications include The Cosmic Christ Basic Readings in Theology (editor 1964); Faith in a Changing Culture Kerr lectures delivered at Glasgow University (1966); a volume coedited withDAVID N. HEMPTON
David Hempton was appointed Dean of Harvard Divinity School in July 2012. Before joining the faculty of Divinity in spring 2007, he was university professor and professor of the History of Christianity at Boston University, and prior to that appointment, he was professor of Modern History and director of the School of History in Queen'sUniversity Belfast.
26: AUGUSTINE ON LUST AND THE WILL PART IV: From Stoic Agitations to Christian Temptations 26: Augustine on Lust and the Will Augustine's views on sexual desire have been very well studied and on them I shall do little more than convey what others have said. But beyond that I should like to draw attention to some of the replies by Bishop Julian of Eclanum. Augustine's case against lust centred on the idea of the will. LECTURES - THE GIFFORD LECTURES Lecture 1 - Introduction: murderous games. Monday 6 May 2019. This lecture introduces some of those moral and ethical dilemmas in studying the classical world, asking how we understand remote ancient cultures that have come to stand both for the pinnacle of "civilisation" and for the nadir of corruption and cruelty. AN OVERVIEW OF THE GIFFORD LECTURES History of the Gifford Lectures. The educator and historian Jacques Barzun described the Gifford Lectures as virtuoso performances and "the highest honor in a philosopher's career." For over a hundred years the Gifford Lecture series has been one of the foremost lecture series dealing with religion, science and philosophy. In his 1885 willthe
THE EVOLUTION OF THEOLOGY IN THE GREEK PHILOSOPHERS The Evolution of Theology in the Greek Philosophers gives an account of those ideas of Greek Philosophers which have decisively affected the subsequent development of theological thought. The selection of topics is confined mainly to the writings of Plato and Aristotle, to the main representatives of the Stoic philosophy, and to Philo and Plotinus among the Neo-Platonists. THE LIFE OF THE MIND The Life of the Mind was originally intended to cover an examination of three fundamental aspects of mind: Thinking, Willing, and Judging.Arendt’s death in 1975 precluded the completion of the entire work, leaving only the first two volumes for publication. The work raises a number of important questions regarding these fundamental elements in our mental lives, taking its departure from LECTURES - THE GIFFORD LECTURES Lecture 1 - Introduction: murderous games. Monday 6 May 2019. This lecture introduces some of those moral and ethical dilemmas in studying the classical world, asking how we understand remote ancient cultures that have come to stand both for the pinnacle of "civilisation" and for the nadir of corruption and cruelty. THE RELIGIOUS TEACHERS OF GREECE In The Religious Teachers of Greece, James Adam investigates the religious ideas of ancient Greece and the development of such ideas out of the tensions that existed between those Greek philosophers and poets who were responsible for the religious teachings of those times.. Setting the stage for the entire series, Adam begins his lectures with an introduction to the “feud” between theTHE END OF REALITY
Professor Gianni Vattimo, Emeritus professor of Philosophy at the University of Turin presents four lectures for the Gifford Series organised around the notion of the “End of Reality.” The four in-depth lectures begin with a careful and considered critique of Alfred Taski’s truth SCIENCE AND SALVATION Science as Salvation looks at the development of beliefs regarding the nature of our world, our future, our origins and our outlook on life through the changing views about natural sciences, specifically physics. As our understanding of the nature of physical matter has changed, combined with a hypothesized need for faith and a worldview dependent on faith, human understanding of life and INTERRELIGIOUS THEOLOGY: THE FUTURE SHAPE OF THEOLOGY Interreligious theology rests on four cardinal principles: It extends to the religious other a theological credit of trust and relies, against some postmodern trends, on the unity of reality. It is located in interreligious discourse and is of a processual, open-ended nature. For the remainder, the lecture deals with methodological issues. 26: AUGUSTINE ON LUST AND THE WILL PART IV: From Stoic Agitations to Christian Temptations 26: Augustine on Lust and the Will Augustine's views on sexual desire have been very well studied and on them I shall do little more than convey what others have said. But beyond that I should like to draw attention to some of the replies by Bishop Julian of Eclanum. Augustine's case against lust centred on the idea of the will.Jump to navigation
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* University of Aberdeen * University of Edinburgh * University of Glasgow * University of St. Andrews THE GIFFORD LECTURES Over 100 years of lectures on natural theologyFRONT PAGE
The prestigious Gifford Lectureships were established by Adam Lord Gifford (1820–1887), a senator of the College of Justice in Scotland. The purpose of Lord Gifford's bequest to the universities of Edinburgh, Glasgow, St. Andrews and Aberdeen was to sponsor lectures to “promote and diffuse the study of Natural Theology in the widest sense of the term—in other words, the knowledge of God”. Since the first lecture in 1888, Gifford Lecturers have been recognized as pre-eminent thinkers in their respective fields. Among the many gifted lecturers are Hannah Arendt, Noam Chomsky, Stanley Hauerwas, William James, Jean-Luc Marion, Iris Murdoch, Roger Scruton, Eleonore Stump, Charles Taylor, Alfred North Whitehead, and RowanWilliams.
The online Gifford Lectures database presents a comprehensive collection of books derived from the Gifford Lectures. In addition to the books, the Web site contains a biography of each lecturer and a summary of the lecture or book. The Web site also contains a biography of Adam Lord Gifford, a copy of his will bequeathing money to the four major Scottish universities to hold the lectures, a brief description of natural theology, an introduction to each of the four universities and news about forthcoming Gifford-related events.FEATURED ARTICLE
John Haldane, “Scotland’s Gift: Philosophy, Theology, and theGifford Lectures,
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LATEST NEWS
September 24, 2019
PROFESSOR MCCAULEY TO DELIVER IN 2020-2021 Robert N. McCauley, the William Rand Kenan Jr.September 24, 2019
PROFESSOR MARK PAGEL TO DELIVER OCTOBER _From the University of Glasgow:_OCTOBER
July 19, 2019
NEW YORK TIMES INTERVIEW WITH 2018 GIFFORD LECTURER JUDITH BUTLER "Judith Butler: When Killing Women Isn't a Crime"July 19, 2019
THE FORCE OF NON-VIOLENCE: AN ETHICO-POLITCAL BIND _From the publisher:_July 19, 2019
THE FORCE OF NON-VIOLENCE: AN ETHICO-POLITICAL BIND _From the publisher:_June 10, 2019
ONTOTHEOLOGY AS ANTIDOTE FOR IDOLATRY _From the University of St Andrews website:_All News
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