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E-book
Author Bennett, Jana Marguerite

Title Aquinas on the Web? : Doing Theology in an Internet Age
Published London : Bloomsbury Publishing, 2012

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Description 1 online resource (287 pages)
Contents Cover-Page; Half-Title; Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Introduction; 1 Can Thomas tweet? Theology about the internet; Theology about the internet: The good, the bad, and the tool; The internet as culture; Theology and the internet as practices; The caveat ... ; 2 Idolatry: On whether the internet is a creature created by God; The internet conversation: Is God online?; Our human "Gods" and the internet; Beauty and truth; God and God's Creature, the Internet; 3 Theological cyborgology in Aquinas on the Web?; The internet conversation: Internet fasts and Avatar; Theological anthropology?
Humans and their (mere) tools?Becoming cyborgs; Cyborg-human relationships; Can cyborg be saved?; 4 Empowering power: Scripture, authority, and sources in Web 2.0 theology; The internet conversation: A power that deceives?; The power of the internet; Conclusion; 5 Asking "whether an internet church can exist?" is asking the wrong question; Introduction; The internet church as the next new thing ... ; Online Christian traditions; Longing for and belonging to Christian community; What kind of community ought we to be?; 6 Theology of the mean: The internet and the good life?
The internet conversation: Winning or faithfulness?Living "the good life" online; To have the "good life" online, you need to be good offline-and vice versa; The good life in a technological age ... ; Conclusions: "The new and the old"-practicing internet theology; Read in diverse ways; Practice imagination; Turn off, purposefully; Be part of Christian community, online and offline; Practice stability in community; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index
Summary The ""problem"" of the internet has plagued theologians for the past decade: some have claimed it as ""gnostic"" and evil because it denies the Christian doctrine of the incarnation and lacks serious engagement with others. Some have viewed the internet as presenting good possibilities for theological work because it provides a democratic arena for sharing ideas, unrestricted by traditional hierarchies and concerns. None of these considerations quite capture the problems or benefits that the internet provides. Jana Bennett reviews critically how Web 2.0 both develops from traditional theology
Notes Print version record
Subject Religion -- Computer network resources
Cyberspace -- Religious aspects.
Internet -- Religious aspects.
Cyberspace -- Religious aspects
Internet -- Religious aspects
Religion -- Computer network resources
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780567553393
0567553396