Description
Book SynopsisFrederick G. Lawrence is the authoritative interpreter of the work of Bernard Lonergan and an incisive reader of twentieth-century continental philosophy and hermeneutics.
The Fragility of Consciousness is the first published collection of his essays and contains several of his best known writings as well as unpublished work. The essays in this volume exhibit a long interdisciplinary engagement with the relationship between faith and reason in the context of the crisis of culture that has marked twentieth- and twenty-first century thought and practice. Frederick G. Lawrence, with his profound and generous commitment to the intellectual life of the church, has produced a body of work that engages with Heidegger, Gadamer, Habermas, Ricoeur, Strauss, Voegelin, and Benedict XVI among others. These essays also explore various themes such as the role of religion in a secular age, political theology, economics, neo-Thomism, Christology, and much more. In an age marked by soci
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‘Lawrence is a great scholar whose influence has been felt primarily in the classroom. The Fragility of Consciousness, his first book, lets the wider world know what his students have long had the benefit of.’ -- Grant Kaplan * First Things July 2017 *
‘Any who are interested in Lonergan studies will find this text a valuable resource.’ -- Daniel Lendman * Reading Religion July 2017 *
"Any serious-minded person who has accepted the dual risk of honestly engaging with contemporary thought, on the one hand, and of living into intellectual, moral, and religious inheritance of the broad Christian tradition, on the other hand will find a friend and a guide in these essays. While the erudition of these essays places them beyond most under graduates, decades of students, fellow theologians, and every library will find something new and vital here." -- Benjamin J. Hohman * Horizons: The Journal of the College of Theological Society June 2018 *
Table of Contents
Frequently Cited Works Foreword by Frederick G. Lawrence Editor's Introduction Part One: The Hermeneutic Revolution and the Crisis of Culture 1. Martin Heidegger and the Hermeneutic Revolution 2. Hans-Georg Gadamer and the Hermeneutic Revolution 3. Gadamer and Lonergan on Augustine's Verbum Cordis - the Heart of Postmodern Hermeneutics 4. A Jewish and a Christian Approach to the Problematic of Jerusalem and Athens: Leo Strauss and Bernard Lonergan 5. Voegelin and Gadamer: Continental Philosophers Inspired by Plato and Aristotle 6. Transcendence from Within: Benedict XVI and J rgen Habermas on the Dialogue between Secular Reason and Religious Faith Part Two: Theology and the Human Good 7. The Fragility of Consciousness: Lonergan and the Postmodern Concern for the Other 8. The Recovery of Theology in a Political Mode: The Example of Ernest L. Fortin, AA 9. The Economic Good of Order and Culture in Relation to Solidarity, Subsidiarity, and Responsibility 10. The Human Good and Christian Conversation 11. Grace and Friendship: Postmodern Political Theology and God as Conversation 12. Growing in Faith as the Eyes of Being-in-Love with God The Writings of Frederick G. Lawrence Index