Tag Archives: indigenous tribe
Atonement Day
Atonement Day Monday’s not only the day set aside in the Jewish calendar for Atonement, but it’s the day on which I’d committed to leading an afternoon discussion group at my Reform Temple. The discussion leader has about ten minutes … Continue reading →
Posted in "Absolute Freedom and Terror", Absurdism, Academe, Action, Afterlife, Alienation, American Politics, Anthropology, Art, Art of Living, Atheism, Autonomy, beauty, Biblical God, books, bureaucracy, Childhood, Chivalry, Christianity, Cities, conformism, Contemplation, Contradictions, Cool, Courage, Courtship, cults, Cultural Politics, Culture, Desire, dialectic, Erotic Life, Eternity, Ethics, Evil, Existentialism, exploitation, Faith, Fashion, Femininity, Feminism, Freedom, Friendship, Gender Balance, Gnosticism, Guilt and Innocence, Health, Hegel, hegemony, Heroes, hidden God, History, history of ideas, Idealism, Ideality, Identity, Ideology, Idolatry, Immorality, Institutional Power, Jews, Judaism, Law, Legal Responsibility, life and death struggle, Literature, Love, Martyrdom, Masculinity, Memoir, memory, Mind Control, Modernism, Moral action, Moral evaluation, Moral psychology, morality, Mortality, Ontology, Oppression, Past and Future, Phenomenology of Mind, Philosophy, Political Movements, politics of ideas, post modernism, Power, Propaganda, Psychology, public facade, Public Intellectual, Race, radicalism, Reading, Reductionism, relationships, Religion, Roles, Romance, Romantic Love, scientism, secular, self-deception, Sex Appeal, social construction, Social Conventions, social ranking, Sociobiology, spiritual journey, spiritual not religious, Spirituality, status, status of women, Suffering, Terror, The Examined Life, The Problematic of Men, The Problematic of Woman, the profane, the sacred, Theism, Theology, Time, twentieth century, twenty-first century, victimhood, victims, Violence, War, Work, Writing, Zeitgeist
|
Tagged a spiritual transformation, absolution, African-American sociologist, anthropologists, anthropologists’ agendas, atonement, capital crimes, conspicuous consumption, covenant as blessing, cultural relativism, cultures and slavery, Day of Atonement, destroying desirability, destroying dignity, destroying human worth, discussion group, discussion leader, Elie Wiesel’s Night, finding forgiveness, forgiveness of sin, forgiving, forgiving genocide, Gen. 12:3, grace of God, Harvard sociologist, Holocaust memoirs, Holocaust survivor, Holocaust victim, human dignity, human worth, indigenous tribe, Jewish doctrine of atonement, judgment, judgmental, Lutheran chaplain, Lutheranism, maintaining desirability, metric for evil, moral intelligibility, moral judgment, moral transparency, Nazi war criminals, nonjudgmental, Nuremberg, Nuremberg Trials, objective right and wrong, optimism and sanity, Orlando Patterson, Orlando Patterson’s Slavery and Social Death, potlatch ceremony, practicality, Reform temple, repairing wrongs, Ruth Benedict’s Patterns of Culture, salvation, sin, sin and wrongdoing, slavery, the Kwakiutl, Tim Townsend’s Mission at Nuremberg: An American Army Chaplain and The Trial of the Nazis, value neutrality, value-neutral anthropology, victims’ denial, Yom Kippur
|
3 Comments