Placing humans and non-humans in a trinitarian and geographical dynamic : Colin Gunton and Bruno Latour on nature, society, and modernity

This thesis is centrally concerned to provide a detailed theological and interdisciplinary account of how the dynamic relationship between humans and nonhumans may be registered in a Trinitarian and geographical framework. The method of this study is to establish a mutually critical and enlightening...

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Main Author: Stephenson, Bret Daniel
Published: University of Edinburgh 2006
Subjects:
230
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.662413
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6624132018-06-26T03:11:24ZPlacing humans and non-humans in a trinitarian and geographical dynamic : Colin Gunton and Bruno Latour on nature, society, and modernityStephenson, Bret Daniel2006This thesis is centrally concerned to provide a detailed theological and interdisciplinary account of how the dynamic relationship between humans and nonhumans may be registered in a Trinitarian and geographical framework. The method of this study is to establish a mutually critical and enlightening conversation between the fields of Trinitarian theology, science studies, and human geography. The thesis then takes as its primary interlocutors Trinitarian theologian Colin E. Gunton, and science studies theoretician Bruno Latour. A detailed discussion of each author’s perspective diagnosis of the Enlightenment’s cultural, philosophical and theological fallout is offered. The study then moves to consider a critical comparison of each author’s respective positive program – ‘Trinitarianism’ and ‘nonmodernism’ respectively – for navigating our way out of the many pitfalls of modern thought. The thesis concludes with an attempt to bring the insights of Gunton’s Trinitarian thought and Latour’s ‘nonmodern’ project into conversation with the human geographical concept of place/placing. Here it is argued that a theological adoption of the geographical concept of place/placing would allow for a more detailed account of nonhuman participation in sociality, nonhuman agency/actancy, and nonhuman participation in human personhood. The culmination of these efforts is to be found in the construction of a specifically Trinitarian theo-geographical concept of place/placing that would allow for a theology capable of more fully registering the dynamic rationality that exists between persons and things, humans and nonhumans, culture and nature. By engaging Trinitarian theology in a mutually critical conversation with the fields of science studies and human geography, it is argued that we are better able to construct a distinctly theological means of registering the deep relationality that exists between humans and the multiplicity of nonhumans with whom we share a common world.230University of Edinburghhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.662413http://hdl.handle.net/1842/30789Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 230
spellingShingle 230
Stephenson, Bret Daniel
Placing humans and non-humans in a trinitarian and geographical dynamic : Colin Gunton and Bruno Latour on nature, society, and modernity
description This thesis is centrally concerned to provide a detailed theological and interdisciplinary account of how the dynamic relationship between humans and nonhumans may be registered in a Trinitarian and geographical framework. The method of this study is to establish a mutually critical and enlightening conversation between the fields of Trinitarian theology, science studies, and human geography. The thesis then takes as its primary interlocutors Trinitarian theologian Colin E. Gunton, and science studies theoretician Bruno Latour. A detailed discussion of each author’s perspective diagnosis of the Enlightenment’s cultural, philosophical and theological fallout is offered. The study then moves to consider a critical comparison of each author’s respective positive program – ‘Trinitarianism’ and ‘nonmodernism’ respectively – for navigating our way out of the many pitfalls of modern thought. The thesis concludes with an attempt to bring the insights of Gunton’s Trinitarian thought and Latour’s ‘nonmodern’ project into conversation with the human geographical concept of place/placing. Here it is argued that a theological adoption of the geographical concept of place/placing would allow for a more detailed account of nonhuman participation in sociality, nonhuman agency/actancy, and nonhuman participation in human personhood. The culmination of these efforts is to be found in the construction of a specifically Trinitarian theo-geographical concept of place/placing that would allow for a theology capable of more fully registering the dynamic rationality that exists between persons and things, humans and nonhumans, culture and nature. By engaging Trinitarian theology in a mutually critical conversation with the fields of science studies and human geography, it is argued that we are better able to construct a distinctly theological means of registering the deep relationality that exists between humans and the multiplicity of nonhumans with whom we share a common world.
author Stephenson, Bret Daniel
author_facet Stephenson, Bret Daniel
author_sort Stephenson, Bret Daniel
title Placing humans and non-humans in a trinitarian and geographical dynamic : Colin Gunton and Bruno Latour on nature, society, and modernity
title_short Placing humans and non-humans in a trinitarian and geographical dynamic : Colin Gunton and Bruno Latour on nature, society, and modernity
title_full Placing humans and non-humans in a trinitarian and geographical dynamic : Colin Gunton and Bruno Latour on nature, society, and modernity
title_fullStr Placing humans and non-humans in a trinitarian and geographical dynamic : Colin Gunton and Bruno Latour on nature, society, and modernity
title_full_unstemmed Placing humans and non-humans in a trinitarian and geographical dynamic : Colin Gunton and Bruno Latour on nature, society, and modernity
title_sort placing humans and non-humans in a trinitarian and geographical dynamic : colin gunton and bruno latour on nature, society, and modernity
publisher University of Edinburgh
publishDate 2006
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.662413
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