Countering Religious Violence with a Better Theory of Religion Following Nicholas of Cusa

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How to Cite: Riedenauer, M. (2024). Countering Religious Violence with a Better Theory of Religion Following Nicholas of Cusa. Religious Studies and Theology, 42(2), 137–147. https://doi.org/10.1558/

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Dissent within and among religions can provoke much violence. Nicholas of Cusa encountered this and countered it with a differentiated theory of religion, implicit in his De pace fidei from 1453. I propose four different levels of interpretation: the dominant philosophical approach, inspired by a high trust in the intellect and enlightened by a self-critical epistemology; the anthropological foundation of all religion in the desire for truth, goodness, salvation and peace, in conjunction with the character of the human mind as a living image of the divine mind; the rational hermeneutical interpretation of particular religious ideas and texts in view of a philosophical theology, and finally its reintegration in the perspective of a Christian. This is in line with Cusanus’s epistemological perspectivism and allows for interreligious dialogue from enlightened religious perspectives instead of violence.

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    Image
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    jpg
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    31 KB
  • container title
    Religious Studies and Theology
  • creator
    Markus Riedenauer
  • issn
    1747-5414 (online)
  • issue
    42.2
  • publisher
    Equinox Publishing Ltd., 2024
  • publisher place
    Sheffield, United Kingdom
  • rights holder
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
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  • doi