Vain Storytelistä löytyvät sisällöt ja lähes miljoona muuta ääni- ja e-kirjaa ainutlaatuisella tarjouksella. Voimassa vain 13.6.2024 asti.
Lunasta tarjous3
Henkinen kasvu
Please note: This is a companion version & not the original book. Book Preview:
#1 The tenth commandment, which prohibits desiring the goods of your neighbor, attempts to resolve the number one problem of every human community: internal violence. If humans are naturally inclined to desire what their neighbors have or what their neighbors desire, this means that rivalry exists at the heart of human social relations.
#2 Mimetic desire is the desire that arises from the objects we should not desire, but do desire. It is the neighbor who gives value to these objects, and it is this third party who makes them desirable.
#3 The mimetic nature of desire explains the fragile nature of human relations. We are blind to the mimetic rivalries in our world, and each time we celebrate the power of our desire, we glorify it. We congratulate ourselves on having a desire that will last forever, but we do not see what this forever conceal: the idolization of the neighbor.
#4 The tenth commandment is the basis of imitating Jesus. It is not due to self-love that Jesus asks us to imitate him, but to turn us away from mimetic rivalries. What we are supposed to imitate is his desire, which directs him toward the goal on which his intention is fixed: to resemble God the Father as much as possible.
© 2022 IRB Media (E-kirja): 9798822545441
Julkaisupäivä
E-kirja: 12. heinäkuuta 2022
3
Henkinen kasvu
Please note: This is a companion version & not the original book. Book Preview:
#1 The tenth commandment, which prohibits desiring the goods of your neighbor, attempts to resolve the number one problem of every human community: internal violence. If humans are naturally inclined to desire what their neighbors have or what their neighbors desire, this means that rivalry exists at the heart of human social relations.
#2 Mimetic desire is the desire that arises from the objects we should not desire, but do desire. It is the neighbor who gives value to these objects, and it is this third party who makes them desirable.
#3 The mimetic nature of desire explains the fragile nature of human relations. We are blind to the mimetic rivalries in our world, and each time we celebrate the power of our desire, we glorify it. We congratulate ourselves on having a desire that will last forever, but we do not see what this forever conceal: the idolization of the neighbor.
#4 The tenth commandment is the basis of imitating Jesus. It is not due to self-love that Jesus asks us to imitate him, but to turn us away from mimetic rivalries. What we are supposed to imitate is his desire, which directs him toward the goal on which his intention is fixed: to resemble God the Father as much as possible.
© 2022 IRB Media (E-kirja): 9798822545441
Julkaisupäivä
E-kirja: 12. heinäkuuta 2022
Astu tarinoiden maailmaan
Arviot perustuu 1 arvioon
Lataa sovellus niin voit osallistua keskusteluun ja kirjoittaa oman arviosi.
Suomi
Suomi