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Who or what comes after God? In the wake of God, as the last fifty years of philosophy has shown, God comes back again, otherwise: Heidegger's last God, Levinas's God of Infinity, Derrida's and Caputo's tout autre, Marion's God without Being, Kearney's God who may be. These essays represent responses to Richard Kearney's work.
Reveals that phenomenology and eschatology are fundamentally inter-related. This book argues that without eschatology, phenomenology would not have developed the ethical and temporal aspects that characterize it; and without phenomenology, eschatology would remain relegated to the sidelines of serious theological discourse.
Manoussakis explores how a relational interpretation of being develops a fuller and more meaningful view of the phenomenology of religious experience beyond metaphysics and onto-theology.
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