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Julia Meszaros [4]Julia Theresa Meszaros [1]
  1.  11
    Selfless Love and Human Flourishing in Paul Tillich and Iris Murdoch.Julia Theresa Meszaros - 2016 - Oxford University Press UK.
    With the rise of modernity, traditional moral concepts such as 'selfless love' have come to appear oppressive or utopistic. Selfless Love and Human Flourishing in Paul Tillich and Iris Murdoch puts such a judgment to the test and reconsiders the grounds on which selfless love may in fact be crucial to human flourishing. It argues that Paul Tillich and Iris Murdoch sought to sustain the link between selfless love and human flourishing by capitalising on the very deconstruction of the self (...)
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  2.  11
    Desire and Vision: Problems of Conversion.Julia Meszaros - 2013 - Philosophy and Theology 25 (2):199-227.
    This article seeks to discern how, in spite of our fallenness, we can come to desire what is good. Judging desire and vision to be inter­dependent faculties, it finds that human reason alone is incapable of generating ‘good’ desire. Rather, desire must be transformed gradually and in relation to human vision. To this end, and drawing on James Alison and Iris Murdoch, particular practices are offered whose strength lies in focusing less on altering the objects than the quality of human (...)
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    Chapter 4. Tillich’s Account of Love. Re-visiting Self-less Love.Julia Meszaros - 2017 - In Samuel Andrew Shearn & Russell Re Manning (eds.), Returning to Tillich: Theology and Legacy in Transition. De Gruyter. pp. 53-62.
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  4.  13
    In the Image of Love: Key Voices for Theological Anthropology.Julia Meszaros & Yves De Maeseneer - 2017 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 78 (1):1-6.
    Love lies at the very heart of the Christian faith and its conception of both God and the human being. Nevertheless, the growing field of theological anthropology has yet to fully avail itself of philosophy’s and theology’s renewed attention to the theme of love. The Introduction to this special issue proposes the phrase ‘in the image of Love’ as an invitation to examine the relation between theological anthropology and love throughout the history of Christian thought. Guided by this motif, the (...)
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