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Review article

Bodily Ontology of the Soul and Health Reform: Adventist Turn In Christian Anthropology

Matija Kovačević orcid id orcid.org/0000-0001-8590-3038 ; Adventist Theological College, Maruševec, Croatia


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Abstract

Following the spread of Platonic anthropology, Christianity has started, already since the 2nd century A.D., to be dominated by dualism – a trend undisturbed by somewhat more holistic Thomism, and further strengthened by Cartesianism, which distanced Christian theology and soul even further away from the body. During the 1960s, theologians have become aware of the far more positive and inclusive attitude that the Bible has towards the body. Yet, a century before, the Adventist movement was born in conditionalism such as presented by Hobbes in Leviathan (XLIV). Man does not have a soul; he is a “living soul” – a body vivified by the “breath of life” (Gen 2:7). Without the body, there is no life, nor, consequentially, eternal hell. To this Adventists have also conjoined a philosophy of health reform in which the care of the body has a key role, and upon which depends man’s intellectual and spiritual wellbeing. On this foundation, they have built a rich healthcare and educational practice. This physicalist version of Christian anthropology is a unique worldview contribution to philosophy of the body and a subject worthy of academic attention.

Keywords

body; soul; ontological anthropology; Adventist anthropology; Genesis; soma; physicalism; dualism; holism

Hrčak ID:

158783

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/158783

Publication date:

2.12.2015.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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