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GORDON KAUFMAN, FLAT ONTOLOGY, AND VALUE: TOWARD AN ECOLOGICAL THEOCENTRISM
Author(s) -
James Thomas A.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
zygon®
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.222
H-Index - 23
eISSN - 1467-9744
pISSN - 0591-2385
DOI - 10.1111/zygo.12023
Subject(s) - immanence , philosophy , naturalism , transcendence (philosophy) , epistemology , agency (philosophy) , contradiction , ontology , value (mathematics) , meaning (existential) , anthropocentrism , order (exchange) , theology , environmental ethics , finance , machine learning , computer science , economics
Gordon Kaufman's theology is characterized by a heightened tension between transcendence, expressed as theocentrism, and immanence, expressed as theological naturalism. The interplay between these two motifs leads to a contradiction between an austerity created by the conjunction of naturalism and theocentrism, on the one hand, and a humanized cosmos which is characterized by a pivotal and unique role for human moral agency, on the other. This paper tracks some of the influences behind Kaufman's program (primarily H. Richard Niebuhr and Henry Nelson Wieman) and then utilizes the flat ontology that emerges in the work of philosopher/sociologist of science Bruno Latour and of environmental philosopher Timothy Morton in order to point toward a reconstructed immanent theocentrism that no longer stakes meaning and value on the unique place of the human. Such a theology remains theocentric, but is now fully ecological.

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