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Record Nr. |
UNINA9910510560103321 |
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Autore |
Koshy Sarosh |
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Titolo |
Beyond Missio Dei : Contesting Mission, Rethinking Witness |
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Pubbl/distr/stampa |
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Cham : , : Springer International Publishing AG, , 2022 |
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©2022 |
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ISBN |
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9783030820688 |
9783030820671 |
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Descrizione fisica |
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1 online resource (388 pages) |
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Collana |
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Postcolonialism and Religions Ser. |
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Lingua di pubblicazione |
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Formato |
Materiale a stampa |
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Livello bibliografico |
Monografia |
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Nota di contenuto |
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Intro -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Praise for Beyond Missio Dei -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Introduction: In Search of Signposts Toward A New Theological Paradigm -- 1.1 Arguments, Definitions, and the Proposal That Defines This Quest -- 1.2 Sustaining and Advancing the Christian Faith Tradition -- 1.3 Problematizing the System of Dual Conversions -- 1.3.1 Heeding the Call of the Wholly Other, by Regarding Every Other -- 1.4 Unavoidability of Violence, Violation, and Discrimination, as the Source of Sin and Corruption -- 1.5 Proclamation That in Itself Is the Call to Discipleship -- 1.6 Textuality of Everything in the Human Realm -- 1.7 Current Paradigm of Mission and Its Discontents -- 1.8 Resources That Lead Us Beyond Missio Dei -- 1.9 Sola Fructus-Fruits Alone: The Unstated End of the Protestant Solas -- References -- Chapter 2: Job, the Joban Tradition, and the Status-Quoist Nature of Mission -- 2.1 Job and the Joban Tradition -- 2.1.1 Eschatological Visions and Limited Teleologies -- 2.1.2 Tame and Traitorous Standpoints: Inhabiting Different Locations on the Same Text -- 2.1.3 Missional Charity and Solidarity: Considering Privilege and Disprivilege As Mutually Independent -- 2.1.4 Resisting Temptations of Complete Resolution and Final Peace -- References -- Chapter 3: Discernments from the Joban Tradition: Theoretical Context and the Mission Imperative -- 3.1 Foreclosure, Denegation, and the Imperative |
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of Civilizing Mission -- 3.1.1 Christian Efforts at Foreclosure and Denegation -- 3.1.1.1 Delineating All of Christian Life as Mission and Missionary -- 3.1.2 From Ur to Empty Tomb: The Unending Destruction of Essence -- 3.2 The Materialist Predication of the Subject -- 3.3 The Question of Full-Presence of the Self and God in Human Speech -- 3.3.1 The Disruption of Presence. |
3.3.2 Possibility of Presence Only Within the Matrix of Critical Pondering and Yearning -- 3.4 The Source of Universality and Uniqueness -- 3.5 Sojourning between a Pair of Ellipses and on a Bridge with Unsecured Towers -- References -- Chapter 4: Contemporary Theological Articulations in Mission Theology and Missio Dei -- 4.1 A Retrojective Paradigm that Refuses Shifting -- 4.2 Seeking to Shift the Paradigm of Mission, Yet Reinforcing It -- 4.2.1 Modern Missionary Movement and Its Shortcomings -- 4.2.2 Scriptural and Theological Basis for Mission -- 4.2.3 Eschatology and Teleology -- 4.3 Saving Missio Dei from Accidental Secular Authorities -- 4.4 Saturating the Empty Tomb and Turning It into a Mausoleum -- 4.5 Seeking a Progressive Theology of Mission for the Postcolony -- 4.6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 5: Beyond Missio Dei: Theological Resources for the Journey -- 5.1 The Messiah Who Abrogates Messianism -- 5.2 Repentance: Renouncing Current Witness and Embracing a New One -- 5.3 Counter-Apocalyptic Witness and Relational Becoming -- 5.4 "Do this in Remembrance of Me"-Witness as Eucharistic Living -- 5.5 Substitutionary Atonement that Prevents any Theological Response -- 5.5.1 Ontological Difference Instituted by the Concept of Human Resource Management -- 5.6 Constructedness of all Religions, and the Witness of God and Christians -- 5.6.1 Relativization of Religions -- 5.6.2 Witness: Not Posturing to Leap, But Always Already Leaping -- 5.6.3 Jesus sans Life, Barth sans Barmen -- 5.7 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6: Witness of God and the Risk of Proclamation -- 6.1 Matthew's Manifesto on Becoming Witnesses and Living Reflexively -- 6.1.1 Turn and Become like Children: Begin Living without Eschatological Missions -- 6.1.2 Making Disciples, Baptizing, and Teaching -- 6.2 Seize the Miracles and Seek Resurrection. |
6.3 Law Versus Faith: "Justification by Faith" Reimagined -- 6.4 Marturion Dei and the Marturia of the Disciples -- 6.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 7: Conclusion: Behold the Marturion Dei, Witness Courageously, and Have Life Abundantly -- References -- Bibliography -- Index. |
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2. |
Record Nr. |
UNINA9910484467803321 |
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Titolo |
Biomarkers in bone disease / / Vinood B. Patel, Victor R. Preedy, editors |
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Pubbl/distr/stampa |
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[Place of publication not identified] : , : Springer, , [2017] |
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ISBN |
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Edizione |
[1st ed. 2017.] |
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Descrizione fisica |
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1 online resource (186 illus., 108 illus. in color. eReference.) |
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Collana |
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Disciplina |
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Lingua di pubblicazione |
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Formato |
Materiale a stampa |
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Livello bibliografico |
Monografia |
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Nota di contenuto |
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Serum uric acid and biomarkers of lumbar spine bone mineral density -- Use of alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity and disease severity to determine secular changes in bone disease as applied to Paget's disease of the bone -- Bone Turnover and Spinal Cord Injury -- Bone-related proteins as markers in vascular remodelling -- Serum Sclerostin as Biomarker in Osteogenesis Imperfecta -- Parathyroid Hormone (PTH) assays and applications to bone disease: Overview on methodology -- Registered microcomputed tomography data as a four dimensional imaging biomarker of bone formation and resorption -- Use of bone biomarkers after weight loss: Example of bariatric surgery -- Adiponectin as biomarker of osteoporosis -- Effect of statins on bone turnover markers -- Chitinases as biomarkers in bone studies -- Hormone relaxin as biomarker for bone health and disease -- Panoramic radiomorphometric indices of mandible: Biomarker for osteoporosis -- Hip Fracture Risk is Strongly Related to Circulating Levels of the Advanced Glycation End-product Carboxy-Methyl Lysine (CML) -- Effects of glucose on bone markers: Overview of current knowledge with focus on diabetes, glucose, and bone markers -- Traditional medicine and use of bone biomarkers -- Osteosarcoma Biomarkers discovery using "omics" approaches -- Creatine kinase as biomarker in osteogenesis imperfecta -- Ameloblastin as biomarker of bone -- Biomarker genes in autosomal dominant osteopetrosis type II (ADO II) -- Bone markers in Rett syndrome -- Bone Specific Alkaline Phosphatase and Exercise -- Bone turnover markers and glucocorticoid treatments -- Overview of biochemical markers of bone metabolism -- |
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Biomarkers of natural radionuclides in bone and teeth -- Bone markers throughout sexual development: epidemiological significance and population-based findings -- Parathyroid hormone (PTH) and the relationship between PTH and bone health: structure, physiology, actions, and ethnicity -- Quantitative ultrasound as a biomarker tool in newborn infants for bone -- Bone biomarkers in gestational hypertension -- Bone biomarkers in intrauterine growth restriction -- Raman spectroscopy as a biomarker-investigative tool in bone metabolism -- Pentosidine as a biomarker for poor bone quality and elevated fracture risk -- Spine bone texture and the trabecular bone score (TBS) -- Bone biomarkers in HIV -- Bone Biomarkers Related to Osteoarthritis -- Dietary Soy Phytoestrogens and Biomarkers of Osteoporosis -- Utilisation and reference values of osteocalcin and procollagen type 1 n-propeptide -- Analysis of integrin alpha2beta1 (a2b1) expression as a biomarker of skeletal metastasis -- Circulating Sclerostin in Bone Sclerosing Disorders -- Pentraxin 3 as a bone biomarker -- Sirtuins as markers of bone disease: a focus on osteoarthritis and osteoporosis -- Tartarate resistant acid phosphatase as a biomarker of bone remodeling. . |
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Sommario/riassunto |
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There are many conditions that affect the skeletal system. On a worldwide basis, osteoarthritis alone affects 10%-15 percent of those over 60 years of age and in some countries more than 30-50% of postmenopausal women will have osteopenia or osteoporosis. With the increasing ageing population, maintaining skeletal health is particularly important. Fractures in the aged, for example, can lead to premature deaths. It is therefore imperative that appropriate use is made of conventional, new and emerging biomarker platforms. Biomarkers in Bone Disease embraces a holistic approach by combining information on different conditions that affect the skeletal system and the use of biomarkers. Biomarkers are described in terms of conventional, new and emerging analytes, techniques, platforms and applications. It covers the latest knowledge, trends and innovations. New platforms are described which combine advances in biomedical sciences, physics, computing and chemistry. |
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