Review:
'In one way or another, most of us work to figure out life. Meaning is complex and often elusive. We are especially challenged when facing the uncertainties of personal illness and decline. This text helps to show us the way. A new paradigm, 'bodyself', forcefully challenges the old mind-body dualism of the venerable Descartes and some now antiquated views of medical practice. Hefner, Baretto, and Pederson's perspective is compelling, with a reasoned approach that draws the reader in.' --Jerome W. Freeman, John C. Sall MD Professor in Medicine, Professor and Chair, Neurosciences, USD, Sanford School of Medicine
'Each essay is thoughtful and considered.... Imaginative and compelling passages elevate the idea of bodyself above the conventions of dualism.' --Roy McCloughry, Church of England, Theology, 120(3)
'These authors reclaim the wholeness of a human being as a bodyself in a book that models a reclamation of the authority of human experience in making meaning. As a conversation starter, this book should ignite imaginations so that others will continue to explore the wholeness of our human being, in light of, and to enlighten, our understanding of Christian spirituality and our traditions of faith.' --Sarah Agnew, The Expository Times, Volume 129, Number 2, November 2017
About the Author:
Philip Hefner is Professor of Systematic Theology Emeritus, Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago. He was Editor of Zygon: Journal of Religion and Science, 1988-2007. His Technology and Human Becoming (2003) is in widespread use as a college text. Ann Milliken Pederson is Professor of Religion at Augustana College, Sioux Falls, SD. She is the author of The Geography of God's Incarnation (2013). Susan Barreto is a journalist, whose work appears on the website of the Lutheran Alliance for Faith, Science and Technology (www.luthscitech.org) and The Lutheran magazine. She is also editor of InvestHedge, a monthly magazine that covers the hedge fund industry.
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