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Philosophy and Religion in the West

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Philosophy and Religion in the West

De: Phillip Cary, The Great Courses
Narrado por: Phillip Cary
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Professor Cary explores thousands of years of deep reflection and brilliant debate over the nature of God, the human self, and the world in these 32 lectures. It's a debate that serves as a vivid introduction to the rich and complex history shared by the West's central religious and philosophical traditions.

Whether you're a believer, a seeker, or both, you'll find much to spark your deepest ponderings in these talks on the long and rich interplay between faith and reason. You'll join Professor Cary on the fascinating search for answers about the similar questions philosophy and faith ask: What is the ultimate reality? What can we know, or what should we believe about it? To learn how these crucial issues have been discussed over the past three millennia is to enter the core of our intellectual heritage - to find the origin of some of our deepest perplexities and most cherished aspirations. It is a comprehensive journey - intellectually, philosophically, and spiritually - but one which requires no special background. By the end of these lectures, you'll gain a new or sharpened fluency in issues that include the historical interaction between philosophical traditions (such as Platonism) and religious traditions (such as Judaism and Christianity); the synthesis of philosophy and religion that characterized the "classical theism" of the medieval period; the most prominent philosophical criticisms of religion; and the reasons why many religious thinkers of the 20th century are suspicious of the alliances between philosophy and religion.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.

©1999 The Teaching Company, LLC (P)1999 The Great Courses
Espiritualidad Filosofía Tradición
Clear Explanations • Thought-provoking Content • Comprehensive Coverage • Illuminating Insights • Respectful Approach

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I immensely enjoyed this lecture series and didn't want it to end. There's so much information and insight that it is worth listening to at least twice. One gains a deeper level of understanding the second time around.

Worth listening twice

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This lecturer has very rare skill to powerfully and simply explain very complex topics. I swallowed this course in several days and I only regret that Phillip Cary doesnt have something not for 16, but for 50 hours.

Amazing and so beautifully structured.

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I learned a lot from this lecture series. His examples are helpful and add value to each philosopher.

Worth listening

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this is my 3rd time listening to this and it's a great refresher. always gets to the heart of the matter.

best history of western philosophy n religion

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The information was present coherently and succinctly without sacrificing core content. I will listen a second time through.

Excellent content and delivery.

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Any additional comments?

Professor Cary mentions the Oven of Aknai story in his discussion of rabbinic Judaism in which Rabbi Eliezer gets God himself to declare that he is right. It is Rabbi Joshua ben Karha, not Rabbi Judah, who argues that the Torah is not in heaven and that, therefore, the rabbis are able to overrule even God himself. On a more serious note, Professor Cary argues that the rationalistic tradition died out after Maimonides in the 13th century. I understand that for the sake of time it makes sense not to get bogged down into late medieval Jewish philosophy and thinkers like Hasdai Crescas and Isaac Abarbanel, but to claim that such a tradition did not exist is false. Yes, the medieval Jewish philosophical tradition lost out to Kabbalah, but that is a complicated story that played out over several centuries. Kabbalah's victory had far more to do with historical circumstances like the expulsion of 1492 and the fact that its debt to non-Jewish sources was less obvious than to anything intrinsic to Judaism.

Some Corrections Regarding the Jewish Tradition

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Interesting info, well structured, great presentation. I really enjoyed this. Especially as someone who grew up in a western religious tradition with little exposure to philosophy.

Excellent

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Like all of Cary’s lectures, this series is illuminating and engrossing. I’d recommend this and as well as his lectures on Christian theology, Luther, and Augustine to anyone with an interest in philosophy and theology.

Fascinating

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I am assuming the listener has a pretty good attention span and pretty good patience with walking through a lot of moderately abstract words and ideas. The person who would not like this is one who would quickly start rolling eyes and glazing over at any description of the details of religious doctrine. I love this lecture set. From days of sitting in Episcopal church as a little boy, I have always scratched my head at its odd (to my boy self) utterances, such as the Nicene Creed. Hey WHAT?! As a little boy with a hunger for vocabulary, I had a hunger to grab those words and phrases and follow them like strings back to whoever and wherever they came from. What does that MEAN? What did those people THINK? How did my "ordinary" neighbors and family members come to reel off all this jargon with apparently little deep understanding of it? How could they say they base their lives on that? As with political matters (where I read just today some impassioned, blustery comment on the Constitution's 14th Amendment, of which the writer was clearly utterly clueless), I have had the same feeling with almost all religious remarks and assertions I hear. How could people seem so ignorant and yet be hurling this stuff at each other and fighting about it? In other words, I am a scholar by temperament. I HAVE to dig into this stuff. And here, I am mightily rewarded. I am swimming in this stuff. And the presentation is ideal. This is as listenable as I could imagine this topic being. As I strive to do as a professor, this professor uses the most clear, plain examples possible to open our minds' eyes to some pretty fancy ideas. This is first-rate. Not only Plato and Aristotle, but inquiring minds might want to know, who was Plotinus? Philo of Alexandria? Maimonedes? Augustine? On and on.

If the topic sounds interesting, you'll like this

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Sheesh... the chapters where the author had to describe the attempted reconciliation between Platonic traditions of the divine and Biblical Christianity truly left me more confused than anything else. I knew this course would be more difficult than other's I've listened to, by the nature of its subject, but I didn't think Plato messed up Christianity that badly. So many recursive creeds!! "Yes I'm no, no I'm yes". I thought there would be more words from the medieval theologians and less explanation of the various concepts of the divine itself. The stuff about Platonic philosophy was great, but once Neo-Platonism got involved it all seemed to go screwy. More thought on the "Good Life" would have been preferable as I'm not the greatest theologian in Catholic history.

Plato sure did a number on Christianity

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