Description: This volume takes a multi-disciplinary approach to continental philosophy of religion, engaging with philosophy, theology, religious studies, anthropology, cultural studies, and new religious movements, to explore patterns of mind and mortality, existence and ecstasy, creativi...
Brief description: Matthew S. Haar Farris is Lecturer in Philosophy at California State University, Fresno.
Review Quotes:
"Ramey and Harris have expertly orchestrated a colloquy of diversely placed voices in praise of "the enigmatic absolute." The end result is certainly a "reframing" of continental philosophy of religion and so an offer of a reflective space within that academic niche that is less beholden to an anti-Enlightenment polemic. But even more basically, what readers get from this unusual gathering of avant-garde essayists is remarkably intelligent encouragement to explore neglected forms of reverence that have nevertheless retained their capacity to seed the stony soil of dogmatic skepticism and bear new fruit." --James Wetzel
"Daring, provocative, experimental, and occasionally very strange, these essays gather the efforts of a new generation to think beyond the limits of modern reason. Speculation, heresy, gnosis . . . it can all be found here." --Philip Goodchild, Professor of Religion and Philosophy, University of Nottingham "Contemplating enigma and chaos, amidst the nebulous rigours of the indeterminate and the animal, this collection offers the reader a brilliant adventure along the outer edges of thought--where mysticism and philosophy can't keep their hands off each other." --Catherine Keller, Drew University "Thought as theurgy. That is what this book is about: scholarship as collaboration with the Absolute that changes the Absolute. The claim is as outrageous as the possibilities are endless. Here, in these pages, the reader is treated to a broad array of thought experiments on everything from astute reflections on the contemporary doyens of Continental philosophy (Derrida, Deleuze and Guattari, in particular), through acts of intellectual heresy and claims of academic gnosis, to the Salem witch trials, Sexmagic, the philosophy of pessimism and (perhaps my favorite) the mysticism of stupidity. To sum up this book is impossible. That's the point." --Jeffrey J. Kripal, J. Newton Rayzor Professor of Religion, Rice University, and author of The Serpent's Gift: Gnostic Reflections on the Study of Religion "this volume's orientation is a refreshing and bold move against the ontological depredations of ineffability" --Religious Theory