Description
Book SynopsisIn this book, Marianne Moyaert develops a new interreligious appropriation of Paul Ricoeurâs hermeneutical philosophy. Viewed in context of his philosophical, anthropological, and ethical work, Ricoeurâs fragmentary reflections on the encounters between religions provide insights on global cooperation practices and religious identity concerns.
Trade ReviewIn Response to the Religious Other is a masterful and multifaceted resource for the theoretical grounding of interreligious encounter in the twenty-first century. With erudition, insight, and imagination, Marianne Moyaert brings Paul Ricoeur’s hermeneutic to bear on the work of interreligious understanding. Scholars will welcome this affirmation of his contribution to the global conversation, and practitioners of comparative theology will by intrigued by and appreciative of Moyaert's use of Ricoeur in contextualizing their work. All of us who are disturbed by the religious violence and passions of our era will welcome Moyaert’s proposal of vulnerability and hospitality as intellectual and spiritual virtues urgently required today. -- Francis X. Clooney, SJ, director of the Center for the Study of World Religions, Harvard University
In this wonderfully rich and evocative volume on interreligious dialogue, Marianne Moyaert powerfully extends the work of Paul Ricoeur to argue for a hermeneutical openness that should precede theological judgment. Her call for a ‘response to the religious other’ is critical in today’s world not only between believers of different religious traditions but also between believers and those who take a more secular path. -- George H. Taylor, Professor of Law, University of Pittsburgh
No mere mouthpiece for Ricoeur, Moyaert writes with philosophical insight and ethical passion, bringing special sensitivity to her own longstanding core concerns—the role that vulnerability and fragility play in interfaith dialogue. The result is a rich and invaluable book that makes contributions not only to interfaith dialogue broadly construed, but also to theology of religions and comparative theology in particular. Indispensable reading for specialists and students alike! -- John J. Thatamanil, Union Theological Seminary
Table of ContentsChapter One: Ricoeur and the Unfulfilled Promise of Humanism Chapter Two: Religion and Symbolic Violence Chapter Three: Ricoeur and Küng on the Impossibility of a Global Ethic Chapter Four: Fragile Religious Identities Chapter Five: Translating Religions: Toward a Hermeneutics of Interreligious Hospitality Chapter Six: Comparative Theology as Vulnerable Theology