Intro; Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Note; Bibliography; Part I: Philosophy of Religion and the Philosophical Tradition; 1. Re-envisioning Philosophy of Religion; Paul Ricoeur; Intercultural Philosophy and Religion; Postcolonialism; Women and Philosophy of Religion; Conclusion; Notes; Bibliography; 2. Toward a New Paradigm for Philosophy of Religion; Human Being Is Fragile; Human Being Is Fallible; Human Being Is Finite; Finitude and Freedom; Conclusion; Note; Bibliography.
3. Re-visioning â#x80;#x9C;Lifeâ#x80;#x9D; in Philosophy of Religion Today: Or: A New Concept for a Global Philosophy of Religious LifePreliminary Matters; Life and Philosophers from the Margins; After Re-visioning Gender in Philosophy; Conclusion; Notes; Bibliography; 4. After the End of Philosophy of Religion; What Comes After the End?; The Wisdom to Question; The Return to Metaphysics; The Eastâ#x80;#x93;West Divide; The Marriage of East and West; Notes; Bibliography; 5. The End of Philosophy of Religion?; A Diverse Object of Inquiry; A Diverse Community of Inquiry; Thick Description; Formal Comparison.
7. The New Geophilosophy: How Globalization and Postcolonial Theory Are Redefining Contemporary Philosophy of ReligionThe Coming of a New Geophilosophy; Laruelle and Derridean Indecision; Speculative Realism and the Specter of Religion; Postcolonial and Globalization Theory; A Philosophy of the Future; Subalternity and the Religious; Bibliography; 8. The Enecstatic Jig: Personalizing Philosophy of Religion; A Methodological Quandary as Bridge; Philosophy of Religion as Enecstatic; Conclusion; Notes; Bibliography; 9. Reverence as Critical Responsiveness: Between Philosophy and Religion.
Multidimensional EvaluationThe End; Notes; Bibliography; 6. Religion Beyond the Limits of Reason: Inoue EnryÅ#x8D;, Kim IryÅ#x8F;p, and Tanabe Hajime on Philosophy of Religion; Question of the Genre: Philosophy and Religion in Inoue Enryo; Kim Iryo.pâ#x80;#x99;s Philosophy of Religion: God, the Buddha, and Us Humans; Tanabe Hajime and Philosophy/Religion as Repentance; The Modern Self and the Philosophy of Religion from East Asian Perspectives; Notes; Bibliography; Part II: Philosophy of Religion and Religious Studies, Theology, and the Modern Academy.