Christianity and secular reason: classical themes & modern developments. Bloechl, J. University of Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame, Ind.:, 2012. abstract bibtex This book features nine essays exploring shifting relations between Christianity and secular rationality. Introduced by editor Bloechl (Boston College), the essays are written by prominent American philosophers and theologians working in the Catholic tradition. Their orientation is primarily Continental rather than Anglo-American. The book began as a set of seminar papers, and the finished essays have the feel of a sustained conversation, even though the contributors do not explicitly engage each other. The discussion focuses on ways that changing religious and secular conceptions of reason and faith challenge, complement, threaten, and depend on one another. Some of the essays are more thematic than historical. However, their arc is broadly historical–from foundations in 12th- and 13th-century thinkers through modern development of robust and confident secular reason (especially in the figure of Kant) to postmodern (and postsecular) themes and figures such as John Milbank, Jean-Luc Marion, and Jurgen Habermas and his engagement with Pope Benedict XVI. The essays are deeply conversant with a broad range of scholarly literature and will be of interest to serious students and scholars. (From the Introduction)
@book{bloechl_christianity_2012,
address = {Notre Dame, Ind.:},
title = {Christianity and secular reason: classical themes \& modern developments.},
isbn = {978026802},
shorttitle = {Christianity and secular reason},
abstract = {This book features nine essays exploring shifting relations between Christianity and secular rationality. Introduced by editor Bloechl (Boston College), the essays are written by prominent American philosophers and theologians working in the Catholic tradition. Their orientation is primarily Continental rather than Anglo-American. The book began as a set of seminar papers, and the finished essays have the feel of a sustained conversation, even though the contributors do not explicitly engage each other. The discussion focuses on ways that changing religious and secular conceptions of reason and faith challenge, complement, threaten, and depend on one another. Some of the essays are more thematic than historical. However, their arc is broadly historical--from foundations in 12th- and 13th-century thinkers through modern development of robust and confident secular reason (especially in the figure of Kant) to postmodern (and postsecular) themes and figures such as John Milbank, Jean-Luc Marion, and Jurgen Habermas and his engagement with Pope Benedict XVI. The essays are deeply conversant with a broad range of scholarly literature and will be of interest to serious students and scholars. (From the Introduction)},
publisher = {University of Notre Dame Press},
author = {Bloechl, Jeffrey},
year = {2012},
keywords = {FLcatholic},
}
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