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  1. Future philology? The fate of a soft science in a hard world.Sheldon Pollock - 2009 - Critical Inquiry 35 (4):931-961.
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  • Cut Off from Its Wellspring: The Politics behind the Divorce of Scripture from Catholic Moral Theology.Jeffrey L. Morrow - 2015 - Heythrop Journal 56 (4):547-558.
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  • ‘Against this empusa :’ Hobbes’s leviathan and the book of job.Gordon Hull - 2002 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 10 (1):3 – 29.
    This paper examines Hobbes’s Leviathan with reference to seventeenth-century discussions of Job to determine what Hobbes’s titular reference might be intended to accomplish. I argue that for a seventeenth-century reader, Job stands not just for patience in suffering but also for a warning against the hubris of attempting to reason with God. In this light, the reference suggests a Hobbesian immanent critique of scholasticism for having the arrogance to presume it knows God’s way on earth. This gesture both creates the (...)
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  • El problema eclesiológico-político del Leviatán en contexto.Marta García-Alonso - 2022 - Araucaria 24 (49).
    This paper discusses the reach of ecclesiastical power in Hobbes' Leviathan, examining how the State acquires some of the roles traditionally played by the Church. I will first contextualize historically the ecclesiological debates on which Leviathan draws. Then, I will examine the essential role Hobbes assigns to the king in the governance of the church. Although Hobbes' political theology is often deemed atheist, in Leviathan the king becomes the institutional head of the Church. Moreover, he should establish a minimal Christian (...)
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  • La hermenéutica bíblica hobbesiana del Leviatán.Marta García-Alonso - 2023 - Estudios Eclesiásticos 98:305-337.
    In this article, we will analyze the redefinition that Hobbes applies to the essential elements of Protestant biblical hermeneutics in the Leviathan. Establishing who is the authorized interpreter, defining the rules for conducting a proper exegesis, and determining the content that results from both tasks, is of utmost importance. The answers to these three questions lay the foundation for a new relationship between civil and ecclesiastical power and fully immerse Hobbes in the theological-political discussion of the 17th century.
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