The relevance of Bernard Lonergan's notion of self-appropriation to a mystical-political theology
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Autor Corporativo: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Lenguaje: | inglés |
Publicado: |
New York :
Peter Lang,
c2008.
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Colección: | American university studies. Theology and religion ;
v. 267. |
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view |
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Tabla de Contenidos:
- Mystical-political theology
- Mysticism
- Evelyn Underhill
- William Johnston
- Political theology
- Gustavo Gutierrez
- Dorothee Sille
- Self-appropriation I : patterns of experience
- Biological pattern of experience
- Aesthetic pattern of experience
- Intellectual pattern of experience
- Dramatic pattern of experience
- Practical pattern of experience
- Worshipful pattern of experience
- Mystical pattern of experience
- Self-appropriation II : operations of the human subject
- Operations of the human subject
- Experiencing
- Understanding
- Judging
- Objectivity of knowing
- The role of definitions in judging
- The role of probability in judging
- Self-correcting nature of human knowing
- Common sense
- The relationship between common sense and theory
- Decision
- Freedom in deciding
- Kataphatic mysticism and the operations of the human subject
- Unity in differentiation: the spiritually integrated subject
- Self-appropriation III : conversion and the dialectic of the subject
- Conversion
- Intellectual conversion
- Religious conversion
- Moral conversion
- Feelings
- Implications of moral conversion
- The relationship between the conversions
- Dialectic of the subject
- Mysticism and the healing vector
- A clarification by contrast
- Self-appropriation and the theologian
- Self-appropriation and the mystical theologian
- Mystical theology as reflection upon personal mystical experience
- Mystical theology as the study of mystical texts
- Mystical theology as reflection on personal experience and tradition
- Self-appropriation and political theology
- Structure of the human good
- The early period
- The later period
- Self-appropriation and the human good.