An in-depth analysis of the function of feeling (Gef hl) in the development of Karl Barth's theological anthropology in dialogue with Friedrich Schleiermacher's theology.
If feeling is recognised at all in Karl Barth's theology, it is often treated as part of Friedrich Schleiermacher's 'feeling (Gef hl) of absolute dependence' that Barth rejected when he broke with theological liberalism. This study offers a different and more nuanced account. It argues that feeling has been neglected in the interpretation of Barth's theological understanding of the human being. Affect theory, which highlights changeable disposition and environmental attunement, is used to discover the ways in which the concepts of feeling and experience change as Barth's theology develops.