无实体灵魂的知识:16世纪后期德国路德教会末世论教义中的认识论、身体和社会嵌入性

IF 0.2 4区 哲学 0 RELIGION
TEMENOS Pub Date : 2016-12-23 DOI:10.33356/temenos.60303
Gábor Ittzés
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在拒绝炼狱之后,新教徒不得不重新思考他们的末世论观点。16世纪下半叶的德国路德教会发展了一套强有力的末世教义,其中包括教导死去的灵魂在复活之前知道什么。在对来源的概述和对总体轨迹的简要重建之后,本文将重点分析无肉体的灵魂声称知道什么以及如何知道。证据令人惊讶。首先,作者对认识上帝的方式当然不只是口头上的敷衍,但真正的兴趣在于对人际关系的探索。他们主要关心的是如何了解其他人类,无论是仍在地球上还是已经离开,以及可以了解他们的哪些情况。其含义是三重的。对上帝的认识和对人类的认识——最终是对自我的认识——是交织在一起的。人类学占据了舞台的中心,本体论因此被认识论所取代。在这一切中,身体从未放弃。感官语言的明显无意识输入和基于感官的经验的概念化渗透在表面上无实体知识的讨论中。对我们的作者来说,认知最终是身体的一种功能,即使这意味着将身体功能“打包”到灵魂中。在这一教义中,对上帝的认识不仅与个人身份密切相关,而且表现出不可磨灭的社会特征,与社区的(重新)构成密不可分。这一教义可能源于教父主义,但也明显地吸收了来自大众宗教的冲动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The knowledge of disembodied souls: Epistemology, body, and social embeddedness in the eschatological doctrine of later sixteenth-century German Lutherans
In the wake of their rejection of purgatory Protestants had to rethink their eschatological views. The German Lutherans of the latter half of the sixteenth century developed a robust doctrine of the last things, including a teaching on what departed souls know prior to the resurrection. Following an overview of the sources and a brief reconstruction of the overall locus, this article focuses on an analysis of what and how disembodied souls are claimed to know. The evidence holds some surprises. First, while more than lip-service is certainly paid to the ways of knowing God, the authors’ real interest lies in the exploration of interpersonal relationships. Their primary concern is how other human beings, whether still on earth or already departed, may be known and what may be known about them. The implications are threefold. Knowledge of God and knowledge of human beings—ultimately, knowledge of self—are intertwined. Anthropology takes centre-stage, and ontology is thus superseded by epistemology. In all this, the body is never relinquished. The apparently unconscious importation of sensory language and conceptualisation of sense-based experience permeate the discussion of ostensibly disembodied knowledge. Knowing, for our authors, is ultimately a function of the body even if this means ‘packing’ bodily functions into the soul. In this doctrine, which may have had its roots in patristics but which has also demonstrably absorbed impulses from popular religion, knowledge of God is not only deeply connected with individual identity but also exhibits indelible social features and is inseparable from the (re)constitution of community.
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来源期刊
TEMENOS
TEMENOS RELIGION-
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
11.10%
发文量
10
审稿时长
26 weeks
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