232,809 research outputs found
Gregory Vancil, Senior Recital, May 2, 1971
Gregory Vancil, Concert program for Senior Recital, May 2, 197
Little Colorado River, Luepp, May 1909. Mendenhall, Gregory, and Navajo. H. F. Robinson, photo.
Photograph from Herbert E. Gregory Book 3: Navajo-Hopi, Arizona-New Mexico, showing Mendenhall, Gregory, and a Navajo on the bank of Little Colorado River, Luepp, taken by H. F. Robinson, May 1909
Dick Gregory at a protest against nuclear energy, Washington, D.C., May 6, 1979
Comedian and activist Dick Gregory at an anti-nuclear energy rally and concert in Washington, D.C. on May 6, 1979. The rally began at the Ellipse of the U.S. Capitol and was followed a march down Pennsylvania Avenue, led by Gregory. The photograph was taken by Don Hamerman who was then a staff photographer for Unicorn Times, a monthly performing arts periodical in Washington, D.C
Dick Gregory speaking at a protest against nuclear energy, Washington, D.C., May 6, 1979
Comedian and activist Dick Gregory speaking at an anti-nuclear energy rally and concert in Washington, D.C. on May 6, 1979. The rally began at the Ellipse of the U.S. Capitol and was followed a march down Pennsylvania Avenue, led by Gregory. The photograph was taken by Don Hamerman who was then a staff photographer for Unicorn Times, a monthly performing arts periodical in Washington, D.C
Altonio Gregory, October 25, 1947- May 29, 2019
Altonio D. Gregory, a 71-year-old veteran, died Wednesday, May 29, 2019. He was born in Newport News, Virginia, but he had been in California for over 25 years
Herbert E. Gregory Book 1: Colorado Plateau and Grand Canyon 1900, Navajo-Hopi 1909
Scan of Book 1 of photographs in the Herbert E. Gregory collection, mostly showing a journey through Arizona and Utah in May through July of 1900, along with photos from another journey in 192
Hopi Corn Dance, Moencopie, May 1909
Photograph from Herbert E. Gregory Book 3: Navajo-Hopi, Arizona-New Mexico, showing a group of Hopi Indians at Moenkopi, Arizona, in May of 1909, performing Corn dance
Preparing for Corn Dance, Moencopie, May 1909
Photograph from Herbert E. Gregory Book 3: Navajo-Hopi, Arizona-New Mexico, showing a group of Navajo Indians getting prepared for Corn Dance, Moencopie, May 1909
Language and theology in St Gregory of Nyssa
This MA thesis focuses on the work of one of the most influential and authoritative theologians of the early Church: St Gregory of Nyssa (†396). My topic of research consists in the relationship between language and theology, as it shaped in Gregory’s polemical works against the radical Arians, in particular against Eunomius of Cyzicus (†395).The first chapter tackles the historical side of the controversy and provides the chronology of the dogmatic disputes on the dogma of Trinity following the Council of Nicaea (325). The second chapters illustrate the conflict being at stake between two theological methodologies: Gregory's grammar of thought is scriptural, whereas Eunomius' theology is much more philosophical and inflexible in its terms. Eunomius claimed that one can know God by his essence in the concept of 'ingenerate'. On the contrary, for Gregory of Nyssa, God 'is above all names'. For him, language and sexuality are realitites of the post-lapsarian world, which made human mind opaque and the exercise of interpretation indispensable. Gregory included also the episode of Babel in the genealogy of our linguistic finitude. The third and the fourth chapters focus on the relationship between language and theological knowledge in St Gregory's third book Contra Eunomium. All words used in human language - including Eunomius' concept of agennetos – have complementary meanings, since no one can describe the essence of an object or of any part of reality. On this basis, Gregory develops his 'theory of relativity' of names, which can never befit God's majesty and glory. In the last chapter, under the heading 'Pragmatics of Language', I investigate the immediate consequences of Gregory's 'theory of relativity'. Speech is treated as a sphere, which resembles the creative power of the hypostatic Word. Therefore, rhetoric becomes the perfect tool for his pastoral concern in doing theology. By choosing rhetoric, Gregory is free to start his theological argument from anywhere, since theology is a discourse about God's redemptive economy. In conclusion, I try to emphasise the actuality of Gregory's theory of names and its importance for the contemporary debates in the Church on thorny issues as Trinitarian theology or gender. I also evaluate Gregory of Nyssa's self-consistency in positive terms
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