Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q4915407> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 13 of
13
with 100 triples per page.
- Q4915407 subject Q9134757.
- Q4915407 abstract "In Christian theology and anthropology, bipartite refers to the view that a human being is a composite of two distinct components, material and immaterial; for example, body and soul. It is not synonymous with the Greek concept of mind-body dualism, where the two parts of man are in conflict by design, and the mind seeks to be free of the body that is its prison. Rather, in Christianity, the two parts were created interdependent and in harmony. And though man's two parts are corrupted at present, redemption is of the body not from the body.In theology, the bipartite view of man is an alternative to tripartite and unitary (or monistic) views.".
- Q4915407 wikiPageWikiLink Q1275703.
- Q4915407 wikiPageWikiLink Q167312.
- Q4915407 wikiPageWikiLink Q178801.
- Q4915407 wikiPageWikiLink Q216545.
- Q4915407 wikiPageWikiLink Q371558.
- Q4915407 wikiPageWikiLink Q37577.
- Q4915407 wikiPageWikiLink Q7843232.
- Q4915407 wikiPageWikiLink Q9134757.
- Q4915407 wikiPageWikiLink Q9165.
- Q4915407 comment "In Christian theology and anthropology, bipartite refers to the view that a human being is a composite of two distinct components, material and immaterial; for example, body and soul. It is not synonymous with the Greek concept of mind-body dualism, where the two parts of man are in conflict by design, and the mind seeks to be free of the body that is its prison. Rather, in Christianity, the two parts were created interdependent and in harmony.".
- Q4915407 label "Bipartite (theology)".