Linked e-resources

Details

Frontmatter
Contents
Introduction
PART I Learning How to Pray
1 Prayer as the Posture of the Decentered Self
2 Who Prays? Levinas on Irremissible Responsibility
3 Becoming What We Pray: Passion's Gentler Resolutions
4 Prayer as Kenosis
5 The Prayers and Tears of Friedrich Nietzsche
6 Attention and Responsibility The Work of Prayer
PART II Praying and the Limits of Phenomenology
7 Irigaray's Between East and West Breath, Pranayama, and the Phenomenology of Prayer
8 Heidegger and the Prospect of a Phenomenology of Prayer
9 Edith Stein Prayer and Interiority
10 ''Too Deep for Words'' The Conspiracy of a Divine ''Soliloquy''
11 Plus de Secret The Paradox of Prayer
12 Praise-Pure and Personal? Jean-Luc Marion's Phenomenologies of Prayer
PART III Defining Prayer's Intentionality
13 The Saving or Sanitizing of Prayer The Problem of the Sans in Derrida's Account of Prayer
14 How (Not) to Find God in All Things Derrida, Levinas, and St. Ignatius of Loyola on Learning How to Pray for the Impossible
15 Prayer and Incarnation: A Homiletical Reflection
16 The Infinite Supplicant On a Limit and a Prayer
17 Proslogion
Notes
Contributors
Index

Browse Subjects

Show more subjects...

Statistics

from
to
Export