Article
Details
Citation
Hass A (2020) The Yes of Nietzsche and Hegel in Altizer. Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory, 19 (1), pp. 17-33. https://jcrt.org/archives/19.1/Hass.pdf
Abstract
Thomas J. J. Altizer read both Hegel and Nietzsche as he read all thinkers he enlisted with a canonical routine: as theologians. This is not to say he confused their agenda and their task. Hegel remained the philosopher of philosophers, Nietzsche the master of all suspicious masters, a poet-philosopher with critique as his hammer. But their thinking was to be understood, in Altizer¡¯s view, principally as theological thinking, which is to say, whatever else we may think theology is in today¡¯s world, it cannot be thought without Hegel and Nietzsche. And this is because, as Altizer would audaciously write, these two figures ¡°met the modern crisis of theology by recreating theology itself.¡± This paper will examine what this re-creation looks like for Altizer, and how, under his reading, such an odd pairing, Hegel and Nietzsche, become more than partners in the process: they become, as Altizer would say emphatically, in ¡°full union¡± with one another.
Keywords
Radical Theology, Altizer, Nietzsche, Hegel
Journal
Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory: Volume 19, Issue 1
Status | Published |
---|---|
Publication date | 05/01/2020 |
Publication date online | 05/01/2020 |
Date accepted by journal | 05/01/2020 |
URL | |
Publisher URL | |
eISSN | 1530-5228 |
People (1)
Reader, Religion