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Frontmatter
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction: Catholics and Continental Thought – a Curious Allegiance 1
- 1. The Reception of Phenomenology and Existentialism by American Catholic Philosophers: Some Facts and Some Reasons 30
- 2. Philosophy between the Old World and the New: Neoscholasticism, Continental Philosophy, and the Historical Subject 58
- 3. Continental Philosophy and American Catholics: Then, Now, and Tomorrow 90
- 4. Meaning, Concreteness, and Subjectivity: American Phenomenology, Catholic Philosophy, and Lonergan from an Institutional Perspective 114
- 5. Catholicism and Continental Philosophy in French Canada: An Opening Followed by an Ungrateful Separation 127
- 6. Phenomenology and Catholic Thought: Unfolding the logos of the Logos 146
- 7. The Use of Philosophy in Critical Catholic Theology 178
- 8. Continental Philosophy as a Source for Theology: The Case of the “Science–Religion” Debate 200
- 9. How Continental Philosophy of Religion Came into Being and Where It Is Going 220
- 10. Phenomenology, Catholic Thought, and the University: Lessons from the French Discussion 245
- 11. Being True to Mystery and Metaxological Metaphysics 264
- 12. Slavoj Žižek’s Theory: The Christian Tradition and the Catholic Intellectual 289
- About the Authors 319
- Index 325
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction: Catholics and Continental Thought – a Curious Allegiance 1
- 1. The Reception of Phenomenology and Existentialism by American Catholic Philosophers: Some Facts and Some Reasons 30
- 2. Philosophy between the Old World and the New: Neoscholasticism, Continental Philosophy, and the Historical Subject 58
- 3. Continental Philosophy and American Catholics: Then, Now, and Tomorrow 90
- 4. Meaning, Concreteness, and Subjectivity: American Phenomenology, Catholic Philosophy, and Lonergan from an Institutional Perspective 114
- 5. Catholicism and Continental Philosophy in French Canada: An Opening Followed by an Ungrateful Separation 127
- 6. Phenomenology and Catholic Thought: Unfolding the logos of the Logos 146
- 7. The Use of Philosophy in Critical Catholic Theology 178
- 8. Continental Philosophy as a Source for Theology: The Case of the “Science–Religion” Debate 200
- 9. How Continental Philosophy of Religion Came into Being and Where It Is Going 220
- 10. Phenomenology, Catholic Thought, and the University: Lessons from the French Discussion 245
- 11. Being True to Mystery and Metaxological Metaphysics 264
- 12. Slavoj Žižek’s Theory: The Christian Tradition and the Catholic Intellectual 289
- About the Authors 319
- Index 325