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  1. “God Has Not Died, He Became Government”: Use-of-Oneself and Immanence in Giorgio Agamben’s Work.Benjamim Brum Neto - 2024 - Philosophies 9 (4):112.
    This article delves into the theme of the death of God in Giorgio Agamben’s work from a political perspective, seeking to interpret the notion of “God” in Agamben through the concepts of “government” and “transcendence”. Although Agamben does not extensively address the theme of the death of God, my hypothesis is that by continually dealing with the ethical and political legacy of Western theology, it is possible to conceive the death of God as an unconsummated political horizon, but that it (...)
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  • Thinking finitude as abandonment: Heidegger’s death of God.Gideon Baker - 2024 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 85 (3):180-200.
    In Heidegger’s lectures on Hegel’s Phenomenology, finitude, not the infinite, is shown to be the site of ‘divine’ awareness of being. Heidegger uses the term ‘abandonment’ (Verlassenheit) to summarise the finitude that Hegel overlooked – abandonment being a theme that Heidegger had first developed in Sein und Zeit as Überlassenheit or ‘delivered over’. However, while abandonment counters the Hegelian absolute, where nothing is ever left out, it does not escape it, since the distress of finitude then becomes what is essential (...)
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