The moral concern was taken from the practical field, and subsumed under systematic theology, creating
a new field of theology and ethics.
Not exact matches
The obligation
of covering the entire
field of systematic
theology in my academic lectures brought to my attention not only
new facts and perspectives, but also complete
fields of learning that I had scarcely noticed before.
This fundamental
theology, which insofar as it is reasonable may be publicly proposed to all, must become the base for the cultural formation
of the
new generation
of priests... I would call rather for a great synergy
of creative thought in various
fields».
It might be good, then, for seminarians and other readers to first learn some
of the old
theologies before traipsing off through the daisy
fields of any
new ones.
It states that its aims are: «to pursue
new insights at the boundary between
theology and science through a rigorous, open - minded and empirically focused methodology, drawing together talented representatives from a wide spectrum
of fields of expertise.»
In addition, it opens trinitarian thought to
new thinking in the
field of theology and natural science, wherein the theory
of relativity, quantum mechanics and the second law
of thermodynamics are prompting investigations into the concept
of time built into natural processes.
Though none
of his 4 degrees are in history as such, he is a «historian
of religion» in the way that that term is used at the Univ
of Chicago to cover the
field of comparative religion; and his
theology degree at Harvard covered Bible and Church history, and required him to master
New Testament Greek.
Mathematics,
theology, philosophy and law are examples
of fields that revolve within a stand - alone world in which
new findings are derived by means
of logical operations consisting
of axioms, postulates or articles
of faith (
theology) that need not be proven true or accurate through empirical studies or analyses.
New is a scholar in the
fields of American Poetry and American Literature and the author
of numerous writings on
theology and innovation in poetry, how poetry «sees,» and the works
of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Susan Howe, and others.