A Physicalist View Of The Passion Of Christ


Autoria(s): Lim, Joungbin
Data(s)

04/10/2008

Resumo

My project in this paper is to provide a plausible idea of Christ’s suffering and death in terms of a theory of the human person. More specifically, I want to contrast two major theories of the person-body relation. One is dualism. Dualism is the view that a human person is composed of two substances, that is, a soul and a body, and he (strictly speaking) is identical with the soul. On the other hand, physicalism is the view that a human person is numerically identical with his biological body. I will argue that dualism is not successful in explaining Christ’s passion for some reasons. Rather, physicalism, as I shall argue, provides a better explanation of how Christ’s physical suffering and death are real just like everyone else’s, so it is philosophically and theologically more plausible than dualism.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

https://bluetigercommons.lincolnu.edu/philosophy_and_theology/2008/sessions/5

https://bluetigercommons.lincolnu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1028&context=philosophy_and_theology

Publicador

Blue Tiger Commons@LincolnU

Fonte

Conference on Philosophy and Theology

Palavras-Chave #Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion
Tipo

text