{"personal_name": "Brown, David", "birth_date": "1 Jul 1948", "links": [{"title": "Wikipedia", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Brown_(theologian)", "type": {"key": "/type/link"}}], "key": "/authors/OL1008818A", "alternate_names": ["David William Brown", "Brown, D.", "Brown, David", "Brown, David William", "David Brown (Anglicaans priester en theoloog)", "David Brown (Anglican priest and theologian)", "David Brown (anglikanischer Priester und Theologe)", "David Brown (anglik\u00e1nsk\u00fd kn\u011bz a teolog)", "David Brown (pr\u00eatre et th\u00e9ologien anglican)", "David Brown (teologo britannico)", "\u062f\u06cc\u0648\u06cc\u062f \u0628\u0631\u0627\u0648\u0646 (\u06a9\u0634\u06cc\u0634 \u0648 \u0627\u0644\u0647\u06cc\u200c\u062f\u0627\u0646 \u0628\u0631\u06cc\u062a\u0627\u0646\u06cc\u0627\u06cc\u06cc)", "BROWN, DAVID, 1948 JULY 1-", "Brown David", "The Reverend Canon Professor David William Brown"], "bio": "David William Brown FRSE FBA (born 1 July 1948) is an Anglican priest and British scholar of philosophy, theology, religion, and the arts. He taught at the universities of Oxford, Durham, and St. Andrews before retiring in 2015. He is well-known for his \"non-punitive theory of purgatory, his defense of specific versions of social Trinitarianism and kenotic Christology, his distinctive theory of divine revelation as mediated fallibly through both tradition and imagination, and his proposals regarding a pervasive sacramentality discerned in nature and human culture alike.\"[1] -Wikipedia", "name": "David Brown", "type": {"key": "/type/author"}, "remote_ids": {"viaf": "57983431", "isni": "0000000118864040", "wikidata": "Q5231822"}, "photos": [14816461], "latest_revision": 6, "revision": 6, "created": {"type": "/type/datetime", "value": "2008-04-01T03:28:50.625462"}, "last_modified": {"type": "/type/datetime", "value": "2024-09-14T08:14:53.636493"}}