University of Notre Dame
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Heart of Flesh: Orthodoxy, Science, and the Soul-Body Problem

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posted on 2024-07-09, 19:54 authored by Eugenia Lydia Senn Torrance
Science-engaged theological anthropology is currently dominated by a movement known as Christian physicalism, which considers evidence from neuroscience to have rendered the notion of a soul obsolete, even in theological discourse. This dissertation offers an Orthodox response to this movement in two ways. First, it suggests a new methodological framework for science-engaged theological anthropology that draws from Gregory of Nyssa’s insistence on the incomprehensibility of the human being and on a models framework inspired by recent work in the philosophy of science. In this framework Christian physicalism can be recast as an improper regulation of anthropological models since models that eliminate the soul can and should be used in scientific contexts without thereby entailing their usefulness in theological contexts. Second, this dissertation seeks to retrieve, develop, and defend a specifically Orthodox model of the human being: the holistic cardiocentrism inspired by the Bible but uniquely cultivated by the hesychasts.

History

Date Created

2024-06-21

Date Modified

2024-07-09

Defense Date

2024-06-12

CIP Code

  • 30.9999

Research Director(s)

Matthew Ashley

Committee Members

Evan Ragland John Betz Khaled Anatolios

Degree

  • Doctor of Philosophy

Degree Level

  • Doctoral Dissertation

Language

  • English

Library Record

6603328

OCLC Number

1444215382

Publisher

University of Notre Dame

Additional Groups

  • History and Philosophy of Science

Program Name

  • History and Philosophy of Science

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