Derrida and the Death of God (Record no. 5131)

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control field 64373
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control field per1691
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control field 20251009102038.0
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fixed length control field 170322n r p 0 0eng d
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Personal name Mark Joseph T. Calano
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Title Derrida and the Death of God
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Place of production, publication, distribution, manufacture Quezon City
Name of producer, publisher, distributor, manufacturer Ateneo De Manila University,
Date of production, publication, distribution, manufacture, or copyright notice 2014
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Formatted contents note ABSTRACT : Jacques Derrida’s understanding of the death of God is rooted in but goes beyond Nietzsche’s and Hegel’s understanding of the concept. On the one hand, Nietzsche’s view of the death of God is related to two concepts: a closing horizon (which is the death of God) and an emerging horizon (which is the eternal recurrence); on the other hand, Hegel understands the death of God asthe Absolute’s confrontation with its negation (death), and Aufhebung (the negation of negation). While Derrida’s notion of the death of God cannot be reduced simply to either a Nietzschean or Hegelian interpretation, it drawsheavily from Nietzsche’s eternal recurrence and Hegel’s Aufhebung. This paper discusses how, for Derrida, a simple denial or negation of God is never accomplished because it leaves behind an evacuated and empty space, which opens up the possibility for a more complicated notion of the death of God.This complicated death of God consists in an undecidable play between life/death understood correctly in relation to différance and the trace, to mourning and sacrifice.<br/>
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Classification Filipiniana
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Topical term or geographic name entry element Derrida -- Death of God
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Genre/form data or focus term philosophy and humanities
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Institution code [OBSOLETE] lcc
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          Periodicals PLM PLM Periodicals Section   HM101 B859 2014 PER .1662 2025-09-20 Serial Budhi. 18 (2); August 2014. pp. 62-108.

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