A Certainty of Death: Appreciating Human Animalhood
Engaging the work of Barry Allen and Karl Marx, a range of topics come together in an analysis of civilization as the buildup and breakdown of tissues. Life and death are both moments and directions. Death, as a moment in life, is certain. Human life, lived against death at its present scale, doesn&...
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ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-ICS.10756-2884722014-06-21T03:50:09Z A Certainty of Death: Appreciating Human Animalhood Hubble, Paul Kuipers, Ronald A. Institute for Christian Studies Death Life Engaging the work of Barry Allen and Karl Marx, a range of topics come together in an analysis of civilization as the buildup and breakdown of tissues. Life and death are both moments and directions. Death, as a moment in life, is certain. Human life, lived against death at its present scale, doesn't succeed in controlling or securing what it seeks to control and secure. Concerns about human knowledge and economies-civilizational tissue and its behaviours-are contrasted with familiarity and wealth as tissue, which are valuable goods against which their bastardizations can show up. We cannot place blind faith in technology, since it often fails the test of good tissue-life and the means to continued life. We cannot place blind faith in market freedom, as long as economic agents are programmed as they are, and as long as wealth is not understood as good, living tissue. 2013-05-03T19:17:13Z 2013-05-03T19:17:13Z NO_RESTRICTION 2009-04 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10756/288472 en http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/obj/thesescanada/vol2/002/MR58273.PDF http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported |
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en |
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Death Life |
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Death Life Hubble, Paul A Certainty of Death: Appreciating Human Animalhood |
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Engaging the work of Barry Allen and Karl Marx, a range of topics come together in an analysis of civilization as the buildup and breakdown of tissues. Life and death are both moments and directions. Death, as a moment in life, is certain. Human life, lived against death at its present scale, doesn't succeed in controlling or securing what it seeks to control and secure. Concerns about human knowledge and economies-civilizational tissue and its behaviours-are contrasted with familiarity and wealth as tissue, which are valuable goods against which their bastardizations can show up. We cannot place blind faith in technology, since it often fails the test of good tissue-life and the means to continued life. We cannot place blind faith in market freedom, as long as economic agents are programmed as they are, and as long as wealth is not understood as good, living tissue. |
author2 |
Kuipers, Ronald A. |
author_facet |
Kuipers, Ronald A. Hubble, Paul |
author |
Hubble, Paul |
author_sort |
Hubble, Paul |
title |
A Certainty of Death: Appreciating Human Animalhood |
title_short |
A Certainty of Death: Appreciating Human Animalhood |
title_full |
A Certainty of Death: Appreciating Human Animalhood |
title_fullStr |
A Certainty of Death: Appreciating Human Animalhood |
title_full_unstemmed |
A Certainty of Death: Appreciating Human Animalhood |
title_sort |
certainty of death: appreciating human animalhood |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10756/288472 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT hubblepaul acertaintyofdeathappreciatinghumananimalhood AT hubblepaul certaintyofdeathappreciatinghumananimalhood |
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