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Can Human Friendship Yield Knowledge of God?: Towards a Religious Epistemology Embodied in the Spirituality of Everyday Life

Van Asselt,Willem J.
Sarot,Marcel
Abstract
While friendship is a perennial phenomenon, it adopts characteristic forms in contemporary culture. These are reflected in the contemporary revival of thought on friendship. The authors build on this revival by inquiring whether friendship could be developed into a key concept for religious epistemology. Does friendship contain an implicit knowledge that might be called religious, and that lends itself to explication by religious epistemology? The authors argue that it does, and that an embodied epistemology is capable of teasing out the spiritual dimensions of friendship. Thus, examining friendships between human beings may yield knowledge of God. Finally, the authors argue that since epistemology and spirituality are closely related, the move from a foundationalist epistemology to an epistemology embodied in friendship also involves a move to a different type of spirituality that is neither rationalistic nor fideist in nature.
Description
Date
2017
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Keywords
Embodied epistemology, Experience, Friendship, Postfoundationalism, Religious epistemology, Spirituality
Citation
Van Asselt, W J & Sarot, M 2017, 'Can Human Friendship Yield Knowledge of God? Towards a Religious Epistemology Embodied in the Spirituality of Everyday Life', Religion and Theology, vol. 24, no. 1-2, pp. 180-202. https://doi.org/10.1163/15743012-02401010
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