Theologie

Dirk Evers

Neurodiversity, Normality, and Theological Anthropology

Jahrgang 4 () / Heft 2, S. 160-184 (25)

In this paper I want to take a closer look at the concept of neurodiversity and to identify issues of normality and human identity linked to this concept. I will argue that the neurodiversity movement's emphasis on normality is ambiguous and sometimes counterproductive, but that nevertheless it raises important questions and promotes insights about mistaken concepts of human 'normality' and the relation between biology, brain, and personal identity, as well as about advocacy, authority, and self-determination. This concurs with philosophical reflections on the relation of nature and normativity: There is no objective human nature and no normal human behavior. All this calls for new ways of understanding Christian theological anthropology, which I sketch in the last part of the paper.
Personen

Dirk Evers Geboren 1962; Studium der Ev. Theologie; 1999 Promotion; 2005 Habilitation, 2005–10 Forschungs- und Studieninspektor am FORUM SCIENTIARUM der Universität Tübingen; seit 2010 Professor für Systematische Theologie/Dogmatik an der Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg.
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8354-5740