Christian Polke, Frank Martin Brunn, Alexander Dietz, Sibylle Rolf, Anja Siebert
This volume views human existence from various perspectives and asks what its purpose is. The underlying thesis is that humans are creatures of relationships. Any anthropology that fails to take this fact seriously will of necessity remain abstract. Instead the authors are interested in how different academic disciplines describe the variety of relationships in human life, taking into account their ethical and theological dimensions.
This volume views human existence from various perspectives and asks what its purpose is. The underlying thesis is that humans are creatures of rel...