{"title":"在(后)基督教生态女性主义对上帝/女神-世界关系的重构中,泛神论是否有一席之地?","authors":"Nadja Furlan Štante","doi":"10.3390/rel15010032","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This paper is an attempt to consider an alternative pluralist pantheism (Mary Jane Rubenstein) as the next step in the evolution of interpersonal, interspecies, and God–human–nature relationships and its possible realisation in (post-)Christian ecofeminism and its epistemology. It follows the methodology and epistemology of theological ecofeminism, which assumes that the oppression of women and the exploitation of nature stem from the same constellation of phenomena: patriarchal domination, dualistic anthropologies, and global hypercapitalism. Recognising that pantheism is a very complex phenomenon and should not be viewed as a single codified viewpoint, but rather as a diverse family of different doctrines, this paper understands pantheism primarily as the paradigm that asserts that everything is part of a divine unity consisting of an all-encompassing, manifested deity or God/Goddess. The paper first explains the pan-en-theistic turn in Christian ecofeminism as a tool for deconstructing the dominant Cartesian dualistic binaries and their symbolism and metanarratives, and as the first “safe” phase of transition from Christian anthropocentrism. From this standpoint, Grace M. Jantzen’s defense of pantheism as an alternative to transcendental theism is further explored as she argues that divinity is found “in” the physical and material world and nowhere else. The paper then moves to the second phase, proposed in the final part of the paper, on the possibility of the theoretical adoption of pluralist pantheism in (post-)Christian ecofeminist ecotheology. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本文试图将另一种多元泛神论(玛丽-简-鲁宾斯坦)作为人与人之间、物种与物种之间以及上帝-人类-自然之间关系演变的下一步,及其在(后)基督教生态女权主义及其认识论中的可能实现。它遵循神学生态女权主义的方法论和认识论,认为对女性的压迫和对自然的剥削源于同一系列现象:父权统治、二元人类学和全球超资本主义。本文认识到泛神论是一种非常复杂的现象,不应将其视为单一的成文观点,而应将其视为一个由不同学说组成的多样化家族,因此,本文将泛神论主要理解为一种范式,即主张万物都是由无所不包的显现神或上帝/女神组成的神圣统一体的一部分。本文首先解释了基督教生态女性主义中的泛神论转向,将其作为解构占主导地位的笛卡尔二元对立及其象征主义和元叙事的工具,并将其作为从基督教人类中心主义过渡的第一个 "安全 "阶段。从这一角度出发,本文进一步探讨了格蕾丝-M-詹特森(Grace M. Jantzen)对泛神论的辩护,她认为神性 "存在于 "物理和物质世界中,而非其他任何地方。然后,本文进入第二阶段,即本文最后一部分提出的关于在(后)基督教生态女性主义生态神学中从理论上采纳多元泛神论的可能性。这里讨论了西方思想中 "泛神论的恐惧和恐怖 "问题。
Is There a Place for Pantheism in (Post-)Christian Ecofeminist Reconstruction of the God/Goddess–World Relationship
This paper is an attempt to consider an alternative pluralist pantheism (Mary Jane Rubenstein) as the next step in the evolution of interpersonal, interspecies, and God–human–nature relationships and its possible realisation in (post-)Christian ecofeminism and its epistemology. It follows the methodology and epistemology of theological ecofeminism, which assumes that the oppression of women and the exploitation of nature stem from the same constellation of phenomena: patriarchal domination, dualistic anthropologies, and global hypercapitalism. Recognising that pantheism is a very complex phenomenon and should not be viewed as a single codified viewpoint, but rather as a diverse family of different doctrines, this paper understands pantheism primarily as the paradigm that asserts that everything is part of a divine unity consisting of an all-encompassing, manifested deity or God/Goddess. The paper first explains the pan-en-theistic turn in Christian ecofeminism as a tool for deconstructing the dominant Cartesian dualistic binaries and their symbolism and metanarratives, and as the first “safe” phase of transition from Christian anthropocentrism. From this standpoint, Grace M. Jantzen’s defense of pantheism as an alternative to transcendental theism is further explored as she argues that divinity is found “in” the physical and material world and nowhere else. The paper then moves to the second phase, proposed in the final part of the paper, on the possibility of the theoretical adoption of pluralist pantheism in (post-)Christian ecofeminist ecotheology. Here, the question of the “fear and horror of pantheism” in Western thought is discussed.
期刊介绍:
Religions (ISSN 2077-1444) is an international, open access scholarly journal, publishing peer reviewed studies of religious thought and practice. It is available online to promote critical, hermeneutical, historical, and constructive conversations. Religions publishes regular research papers, reviews, communications and reports on research projects. In addition, the journal accepts comprehensive book reviews by distinguished authors and discussions of important venues for the publication of scholarly work in the study of religion. Religions aims to serve the interests of a wide range of thoughtful readers and academic scholars of religion, as well as theologians, philosophers, social scientists, anthropologists, psychologists, neuroscientists and others interested in the multidisciplinary study of religions