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www.boundary2.org
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| | | | Anthony Galluzzo I Victor Frankenstein, the titular character and "Modern Prometheus" of Mary Shelley's 1818 novel, drawing on his biochemical studies at the University of Ingolstadt, creates life by reanimating the dead. While the gothic elements of Shelley's narrative ensure its place, or those of its twentieth-century film adaptations, in the pantheons of popular horror,... | |
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itself.blog
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| | | | This is a guest post by Joel Kuhlin, doctoral student at the Centre for Theology and Religious Studies, Lund University. The present response attempts to think with, rather than about, certain key-aspects of Thomas Lynch'sApocalyptic Political Theology, from the perspective of a philologist. From a philological appreciation ofApocalyptic Political Theology, instead of a purely philosophical... | |
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itself.blog
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| | | | This is a guest post from Ulrich Schmiedel, Lecturer in Theology, Politics, and Ethics, University of Edinburgh Thomas Lynch's Apocalyptic Political Theology is an astute and acerbic critique of liberalism. No surprises here. Since Carl Schmitt combined the political with the theological, the Schmittian separation of political theology from liberalism (and liberalism from political theology)... | |
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laf443259520.wordpress.com
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| | I decided to make a post from a comment on the previous thread. Commenter Swanny River queried: "I was reading Genesis 5 this morning and don't recall what you said about verse 2. I like the explanation of Genesis 1:27, but I don't remember about 5:2 and it does seem to be at odds with... |