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E-raamat: Companion to Ricoeur's The Symbolism of Evil

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The Symbolism of Evil is the final book in Ricoeurs early trilogy on the will. While Freedom and Nature sets aside normative questions altogether and Fallible Man examines the question of what makes the bad will possible, here Ricoeur takes up the question of evil in its actuality. What is the nature of the will that has succumbed to evil? The question of evil resists reflection and remains inscrutable. This leads Ricoeur to proceed indirectly through a study of the abundant resources contained in symbols and myths. Symbols, as Ricoeur famously says, give rise to thought and thereby open up a field of meanings which help to inform a philosophical reflection on evil. This hermeneutics of symbols signals an important shift in Ricoeurs philosophical trajectory which increasingly shifts to language and the various forms of discourse which harbor multiple meanings. The contributors to this volume highlight a wide range of important themes in Ricoeurs treatment of the symbolics of evil that resonate with current topics in contemporary philosophy and religion.
Introduction to The Symbolism of Evil vii
Scott Davidson
PART I REFLECTIONS ON EVIL AND ITS PRIMARY SYMBOLS
1(66)
1 The Question of Evil
3(16)
Jerome Poree
2 The Ambiguity of Flesh
19(18)
Adam J. Graves
3 A Phenomenological Hermeneutics of Sin
37(14)
Marc-Antoine Vallee
4 On the Servile Will
51(16)
Daniel Frey
PART II THE SECONDARY SYMBOLICS OF EVIL: RELIGIOUS RITUAL, METAPHOR, AND MYTH
67(84)
5 Why Religious Symbols? Accounting for an Unfashionable Approach
69(18)
Petruschka Schaafsma
6 Wagering for a Second Naivete? Tensions in Ricoeur's Account of the Symbolism of Evil
87(16)
Christina M. Gschwandtner
7 Between Barth and Eliade: Ricoeur's Mediation of the Word and the Sacred
103(20)
Brian Gregor
8 Metaphor as Dynamic Myth in Ricoeur
123(14)
Colby Dickinson
9 Salvation as Knowledge: Ricoeur's Reading of Plato
137(14)
Scott Davidson
PART III WHAT DOES THE SYMBOL GIVE?
151(58)
10 The Symbol Gives Rise to Race
153(16)
Nathan D. Pederson
11 The Symbol Gives Rise to Theology: A Poetics of Theology
169(20)
Dan R. Stiver
12 The Symbol Gives Rise to Faith (Perhaps): Theopoetics and the Gift of a Second Naivete
189(20)
B. Keith Putt
Index 209(14)
About the Contributors 223
Scott Davidson is professor of philosophy at West Virginia University.