Religion and Philosophy at the Extremes of Human Experience

John Newton, who wrote the lyrics for "Amazing Grace" in 1772, was the captain of a slave ship prior to entering the clergy. In other words, the man to whom the words "a wretch like me" originally referred – was actually a thoroughgoing wretch, a man who bought and sold human bei...

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Main Author: Kirby, Joseph
Other Authors: Institute for Christian Studies
Format: Course Material
Language:English
Published: Institute for Christian Studies 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10756/346426
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spelling fticscanada:oai:ir.icscanada.edu:10756/346426 2023-09-26T15:21:08+02:00 Religion and Philosophy at the Extremes of Human Experience ICSD 13210 S15. Religion and Philosophy at the Extremes of Human Experience Kirby, Joseph Institute for Christian Studies 2015-03-09T17:54:15Z http://hdl.handle.net/10756/346426 en eng Institute for Christian Studies Kirby, Joseph. "ICSD 13210 S15: Religion and Philosophy at the Extremes of Human Experience" (2015). Syllabi. Institute for Christian Studies. Course code: ICSD 13210 S15 http://hdl.handle.net/10756/346426 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License Copyright, Institute for Christian Studies, all rights reserved. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Philosophy and religion Human experience Frankl Victor Freud Sigmund 1856-1939 Suffering Syllabus MWS 2015 fticscanada 2023-08-25T15:40:07Z John Newton, who wrote the lyrics for "Amazing Grace" in 1772, was the captain of a slave ship prior to entering the clergy. In other words, the man to whom the words "a wretch like me" originally referred – was actually a thoroughgoing wretch, a man who bought and sold human beings for profit. The grace that saved him, meanwhile, first appeared over the course of an extended brush with death: the ship he was on almost sank in a violent North Atlantic gale, then floated at the mercy of the winds and currents for nearly a month before drifting fortuitously onto the coast of Northern Ireland. We live most of our lives in a state of relative equilibrium, calmly passing through more-or-less predictable sequences of habit and custom, work and play, activity and rest. This course will explore what happens when these predictable sequences vanish, when we no longer know where we are or where we are going, what we should do, who we should strive to become. We will focus in particular on how religion and philosophy operate, both experientially and discursively, when the normal equilibrium of our lives has been shattered. This will involve a comparison between two opposing approaches to theses edges: in short, the very suffering that often seems necessary to open the soul out unto God is often cited as evidence that God cannot possibly exist, that religion is nothing more than a retreat into illusion spurred by the fear of death. Thus, beginning with a comparison between Victor Frankl’s account of his experiences in the Nazi death camps, Man’s Search for Meaning, and Freud’s classic denunciation of religion in The Future of an Illusion, this course explores how the tension between devastation, hope, and despair has played out in various other extremes of human experience. Course Material North Atlantic Institute for Christian Studies, Canada: ICS Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Institute for Christian Studies, Canada: ICS Repository
op_collection_id fticscanada
language English
topic Philosophy and religion
Human experience
Frankl
Victor
Freud
Sigmund
1856-1939
Suffering
spellingShingle Philosophy and religion
Human experience
Frankl
Victor
Freud
Sigmund
1856-1939
Suffering
Kirby, Joseph
Religion and Philosophy at the Extremes of Human Experience
topic_facet Philosophy and religion
Human experience
Frankl
Victor
Freud
Sigmund
1856-1939
Suffering
description John Newton, who wrote the lyrics for "Amazing Grace" in 1772, was the captain of a slave ship prior to entering the clergy. In other words, the man to whom the words "a wretch like me" originally referred – was actually a thoroughgoing wretch, a man who bought and sold human beings for profit. The grace that saved him, meanwhile, first appeared over the course of an extended brush with death: the ship he was on almost sank in a violent North Atlantic gale, then floated at the mercy of the winds and currents for nearly a month before drifting fortuitously onto the coast of Northern Ireland. We live most of our lives in a state of relative equilibrium, calmly passing through more-or-less predictable sequences of habit and custom, work and play, activity and rest. This course will explore what happens when these predictable sequences vanish, when we no longer know where we are or where we are going, what we should do, who we should strive to become. We will focus in particular on how religion and philosophy operate, both experientially and discursively, when the normal equilibrium of our lives has been shattered. This will involve a comparison between two opposing approaches to theses edges: in short, the very suffering that often seems necessary to open the soul out unto God is often cited as evidence that God cannot possibly exist, that religion is nothing more than a retreat into illusion spurred by the fear of death. Thus, beginning with a comparison between Victor Frankl’s account of his experiences in the Nazi death camps, Man’s Search for Meaning, and Freud’s classic denunciation of religion in The Future of an Illusion, this course explores how the tension between devastation, hope, and despair has played out in various other extremes of human experience.
author2 Institute for Christian Studies
format Course Material
author Kirby, Joseph
author_facet Kirby, Joseph
author_sort Kirby, Joseph
title Religion and Philosophy at the Extremes of Human Experience
title_short Religion and Philosophy at the Extremes of Human Experience
title_full Religion and Philosophy at the Extremes of Human Experience
title_fullStr Religion and Philosophy at the Extremes of Human Experience
title_full_unstemmed Religion and Philosophy at the Extremes of Human Experience
title_sort religion and philosophy at the extremes of human experience
publisher Institute for Christian Studies
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10756/346426
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation Kirby, Joseph. "ICSD 13210 S15: Religion and Philosophy at the Extremes of Human Experience" (2015). Syllabi. Institute for Christian Studies.
Course code: ICSD 13210 S15
http://hdl.handle.net/10756/346426
op_rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License
Copyright, Institute for Christian Studies, all rights reserved.
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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