Thomas Aquinas and Teilhard de Chardin: Christian Humanism in an Age of Unbelief
Material type: TextPublication details: Eugene, Oregon Pickwick Publications 2022Description: 298p 23 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781666738490
- E90 23/eng/20221215 G553
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | DVK Library Stack -> First Floor -> E | E90 G553 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 11079103 |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 275-289) and indexes.
Prologue -- Thomas Aquinas : Theologian, scholar, friar preacher (1224/5-1274) -- Pierre Teilhard de Chardin : Scientist, priest, mystic (1881-1955) -- Part One : Thomas and Teilhard : two visionaries : 1. Thomas d'Aquino and Pierre Teilhard de Chardin ; 2. Thomas Aquinas's theology of creation ; 3. Teilhard de Chardin's cosmological vision ; 4. Thomas Aquinas's theological anthropology ; 5. The human phenomenon in Teilhard de Chardin ; 6. Thomas Aquinas's Christology ; 7. Teilhard de Chardin's Christocentrism ; 8. Two cosmotheanthropic visions -- Part Two : Toward a renewed humanism : 9. Humanism in an age of unbelief ; 10. Disputed questions -- Epilogue The mystery and power of love -- Bibliography -- Index of subjects -- Index of names.
"In an increasingly divided and secularized world, in an age of unbelief, we yearn for increased unity, for a sense of the transcendent, for a humanism that does not force one to choose between God and the world. This humanism requires an integration of ancient wisdom with modern learning, or, one might say, faith and reason, religion and science, Christology and cosmology. As the Gospel of Matthew puts it, the sage goes into the storehouse to bring out both something old and something new. To this Christian humanism both Thomas Aquinas and Pierre Teilhard de Chardin have significant contributions to make. One is not forced to choose between them but rather to see in these two visionaries--one medieval, one modern--complementary insights. One philosophically precise, the other scientifically trained, they challenge us to look again at our search for wholeness, for holiness. Can we see something of what they saw? Can we seek something of what they sought?"-- Provided by publisher.
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