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Ellen Muehlberger deposited The Will of Others in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoScholarly reflections on the concept of the will as it is articulated in late ancient texts have centered on the male individual and the difficulties he faces as he tries to train or direct his intentions. By contrast, in this article we seek to explore late ancient concepts and negotiations of the will by considering a cluster of ancient Jewish…[Read more]
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Ellen Muehlberger deposited The Will of Others in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoScholarly reflections on the concept of the will as it is articulated in late ancient texts have centered on the male individual and the difficulties he faces as he tries to train or direct his intentions. By contrast, in this article we seek to explore late ancient concepts and negotiations of the will by considering a cluster of ancient Jewish…[Read more]
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Ellen Muehlberger deposited The Will of Others in the group
Ancient Jew Review on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoScholarly reflections on the concept of the will as it is articulated in late ancient texts have centered on the male individual and the difficulties he faces as he tries to train or direct his intentions. By contrast, in this article we seek to explore late ancient concepts and negotiations of the will by considering a cluster of ancient Jewish…[Read more]
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Ellen Muehlberger deposited The Will of Others: Coercion, Captivity, and Choice in Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months ago
Scholarly reflections on the concept of the will as it is articulated in late ancient texts have centered on the male individual and the difficulties he faces as he tries to train or direct his intentions. By contrast, in this article we seek to explore late ancient concepts and negotiations of the will by considering a cluster of ancient Jewish…[Read more]
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Ellen Muehlberger's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months ago
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Peter Webster deposited Users, technologies, organisations: Towards a cultural history of world web archiving in the group
Library & Information Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoIf 2015 marked the elapse of 25 years since the birth of the web, 2016 marked the 20th anniversary of web archiving: of systematic attempts to preserve web content and make it accessible to scholars and the public. As such, the time is ripe to make an initial assessment of the history of the movement, and the patterns into which it has already…[Read more]
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Peter Webster deposited Users, technologies, organisations: Towards a cultural history of world web archiving in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoIf 2015 marked the elapse of 25 years since the birth of the web, 2016 marked the 20th anniversary of web archiving: of systematic attempts to preserve web content and make it accessible to scholars and the public. As such, the time is ripe to make an initial assessment of the history of the movement, and the patterns into which it has already…[Read more]
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Peter Webster deposited Technology, ethics and religious language: early Anglophone Christian reactions to “cyberspace” in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoThe very recent past has seen an upswing of scholarly interest not so much in the Internet and Web themselves but in the terms in which they have been discussed and understood. This article examines a remarkable effusion of writing in the 1990s that addressed the spiritual and ethical implications of “cyberspace”. Christian critics reacted in dif…[Read more]
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Peter Webster deposited Technology, ethics and religious language: early Anglophone Christian reactions to “cyberspace” in the group
British History on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoThe very recent past has seen an upswing of scholarly interest not so much in the Internet and Web themselves but in the terms in which they have been discussed and understood. This article examines a remarkable effusion of writing in the 1990s that addressed the spiritual and ethical implications of “cyberspace”. Christian critics reacted in dif…[Read more]
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Peter Webster started the topic Early Christian reactions to "cyberspace" in the discussion
AAR Artificial Intelligence and Religion Research Seminar on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoMembers might like to know that I recently added an article of mine to CORE, on the trajectories of response in the late 1990s among Christians to the potential (positive and negative) of cyberspace. It shows the continuities of these concerns with Christian reactions to earlier technological change, and so may be of interest in framing the…[Read more]
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Peter Webster deposited Users, technologies, organisations: Towards a cultural history of world web archiving on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months ago
If 2015 marked the elapse of 25 years since the birth of the web, 2016 marked the 20th anniversary of web archiving: of systematic attempts to preserve web content and make it accessible to scholars and the public. As such, the time is ripe to make an initial assessment of the history of the movement, and the patterns into which it has already…[Read more]
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Peter Webster's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months ago
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Peter Webster deposited Technology, ethics and religious language: early Anglophone Christian reactions to “cyberspace” on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months ago
The very recent past has seen an upswing of scholarly interest not so much in the Internet and Web themselves but in the terms in which they have been discussed and understood. This article examines a remarkable effusion of writing in the 1990s that addressed the spiritual and ethical implications of “cyberspace”. Christian critics reacted in dif…[Read more]
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Alana Vincent's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months ago
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Alana Vincent deposited Tzedakah, Tikkun: Jewish approaches to social justice on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months ago
This chapter will present a historicised phenomenological account of the two dominant forms of social justice within Judaism: tzedakah (justice) and tikkun (advocacy, or, literally, ‘mending’). Tzedakah is a core principle of religious Judaism and also has profound resonances within secular Judaism; the history of the Anglo-Jewish community is ill…[Read more]
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Marika Rose's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months ago
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Marika Rose deposited Holy mothers of God: sex work, inheritance, and the women of Jesus’ genealogy in the group
Theology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoIn this article I consider the stories of Jesus’ women ancestors in the genealogy which opens the Gospel of Matthew. Reading these stories in light of Marxist-feminist analyses of marriage, sex work and reproductive labor, alongside contemporary sex workers’ rights discourse, and through Marcella Althaus-Reid’s claim that all theology is “a se…[Read more]
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Marika Rose deposited Holy mothers of God: sex work, inheritance, and the women of Jesus’ genealogy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months ago
In this article I consider the stories of Jesus’ women ancestors in the genealogy which opens the Gospel of Matthew. Reading these stories in light of Marxist-feminist analyses of marriage, sex work and reproductive labor, alongside contemporary sex workers’ rights discourse, and through Marcella Althaus-Reid’s claim that all theology is “a se…[Read more]
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Neil B MacDonald deposited Wittgenstein and Derrida on the Possibility of Meaning: Hierarchy or Non-Hierarchy, Simple or Non-simple Origin, Deferral or Non-Deferral in the group
Dialectical Theology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months agoMeaning understood in terms of teachability and learnability is crucial to Wittgenstein’s later work. As regards the resolution of philosophical problems – and epistemological problems in particular – this approach seems to posit a hierarchy of meaning that excludes endless deferral. This is the basis of Wittgenstein’s attack on philo…[Read more]
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Neil B MacDonald deposited ‘Time is no Barrier’ in John’s Resurrection Narrative (John 20:24-29): A Theology of the Absolute Identity of the ‘Wounds at the Cross’? in the group
Theology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months agoJohn 20:24-29 – the Doubting Thomas Narrative – is explored in terms of the thesis that Jesus showed Thomas wounds absolutely identical to the wounds originating at the time of the crucifixion. John understands the risen Jesus to enact sovereignty over time in this passage. This was a new stage in John’s Christological Development and aug…[Read more]
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