Recent developments in technology have given rise to the impression that the boundaries imposed by our bodiliness can somehow be overcome. The increasing philosophical interest in bodiliness as an unavoidable human condition can be seen as a response to this far too comfortable impression. The essays in this volume address the topic of bodiliness from a theological point of view. They show that our perceptions of, and relationships with, one another cannot be divorced from our bodily condition, and that this existential reality affects significantly how we understand our relationship with God. The contributions also address how we can best deal with the fragility of our bodily condition, as well as the challenges that technological and medical procedures for altering the appearance and constitution of our bodies pose. Special attention is given to how liturgical experience not only offers us a means to respond to these challenges but also to deepen our understanding of Christian communities as ineluctably bodily.
Yoga Breath : Prāṇa and Prāṇāyāma in Early Modern Yoga
Magdalena Kraler
bookReligious Education at Schools in Europe : Part 1: Central Europe
bookReligious Education at Schools in Europe : Part 2: Western Europe
bookReligious Education at Schools in Europe : Part 3: Northern Europe
bookReligious Education at Schools in Europe : Part 4: Eastern Europe. In cooperation with Sabine Hermisson and Maximillian Saudino
bookReligious Education at Schools in Europe : Part 5: Southeastern Europe. In cooperation with Sabine Hermisson and Maximillian Saudino
bookReligious Education at Schools in Europe : Part 6: Southern Europe. In cooperation with Sabine Hermisson and Maximillian Saudino
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