{Concilium}

International Journal for Theology

2006 / No. 2

Theology in a World of Specialization

Table of Contents

Introduction: Theology in a World of Specialization 7–9
Erik Borgman and Felix Wilfred

I. Fragmentation and Specialization: The Social and Academic Situation

The Social Background to the Process of Differentiation in Society and the Life Worlds of Human Beings 13–23
Karl Gabriel

Theology in the Modern University: Whither Specialization? 24–32
Felix Wilfred

II. Fragmentation and Specialization: Issues for Theology

Theology and Religious Studies in an Age of Fragmentation35–44
Sheila Greeve Davaney

`Many Have Undertaken . . . and I too Decided': The One Story or the Many? 45–52
Elaine Wainright

Theological Ethics without Theology: Assessing Theological-Ethical Reflection of Moral Challenges Posed by Pluralism in Relation to Theology 53–64
Christoph Baumgartner

Church History without God or without Faith? 65–75
Willem Frijhoff

III. Fragmentation and Specialization: Attempts to Reconnect

From Shaken Foundations to a Different Integrity: Spirituality as Response to Fragmentation79–87
Mary Grey

Theologies of the South: Incarnate and Holistic88–98
Diego Irarrazaval

Who Framed Clodovis Boff? Revisiting the Controversy of `Theologies of the Genitive' in the Twenty-First Century99–107
Marcella Maria Althaus-Reid
IV. Fragmentation and Specialization: Theology and Interdisciplinarity
Theology in Relation to the Natural Sciences111–121
Palmyre Oomen
Theology and the Social Sciences122–130
Richard H. Roberts

Saving Doctrine: Towards a Theology of Health and Medicine131–140
Stephan van Erp

Theology: Discipline at the Limits141–151
Erik Borgman

Edited by Erik Borgman and Felix Wilfred

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