Description
Book SynopsisFinite, Contingent, and Free is a Roman Catholic perspective that views acceptance as the proper response to the conditions of human existence, and the foundation for ethics.
Trade ReviewJoyce Kloc McClure here offers us an important and deceptively sophisticated meditation on some of the key conditions for the possibility of moral existence in our time. -- John R. Berkman, Catholic University of America
Joyce Kloc McClure offers a serious and systematic study of contingency and limitation not as obstacles to human freedom but precisely as the context for free human action. . This outstanding book deserves the full attention not only of students of Christian ethics but of all who are concerned about the possibility of authentic moral action. -- Brian Linnane, S.J., College of the Holy Cross
This important study explores the continuing legacy of ?mechanistic reductionism? in theology and ethics and shows how non-Newtonian science opens the door to a plausible account of humans as finite, contingent, and free. McClure?s efforts to root ethical obligation in an account of the structure of existence in which humans are profoundly but not completely vulnerable is a significant contribution to the field.... -- Paul Lauritzen, John Carroll University
In an important work for an anxious age, Joyce Kloc McClure offers an elegant and insightful reflection on our 'profound vulnerability to the conditions of existence.' Anyone struggling with the moral implications of contingency and finitude will find a helpful resource in her carefully developed notion of 'freedom as acceptance.' -- Christopher Steck S.J., Georgetown University
This important study explores the continuing legacy of “mechanistic reductionism” in theology and ethics and shows how non-Newtonian science opens the door to a plausible account of humans as finite, contingent, and free. McClure’s efforts to root ethical obligation in an account of the structure of existence in which humans are profoundly but not completely vulnerable is a significant contribution to the field. -- Paul Lauritzen, John Carroll University
Table of ContentsPart 1 Part I: The Human Person and the Terms of Existence Chapter 2 Contingency and Finitude as Conditions of Existence Chapter 3 Freedom and Personhood in a Non-Newtonian Paradigm Chapter 4 Moral Luck and Vulnerability Part 5 Part II: Implications for Ethics Chapter 6 Vulnerability and Acceptance in Our Mutual Friend: A Case Study Chapter 7 An Ethics of Active Acceptance