Crossing the Rubicon: The Borderlands of Philosophy and Theology

Crossing the Rubicon: The Borderlands of Philosophy and Theology

Crossing the Rubicon: The Borderlands of Philosophy and Theology

Crossing the Rubicon: The Borderlands of Philosophy and Theology

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Overview

In France today, philosophy—phenomenology in particular—finds itself in a paradoxical relation to theology. Some debate a "theological turn." Others disavow theological arguments as if such arguments would tarnish their philosophical integrity, while nevertheless carrying out theology in other venues. In Crossing the Rubicon, Emmanuel Falque seeks to end this face-off. Convinced that "the more one theologizes, the better one philosophizes," he proposes a counterblow by theology against phenomenology. Instead of another philosophy of "the threshold" or "the leap"—and through a retrospective and forward-looking examination of his own method—he argues that an encounter between the two disciplines will reveal their mutual fruitfulness and their true distinctive borders. Falque shows that he has made the crossing between philosophy and theology and back again with audacity and perhaps a little recklessness, knowing full well that no one thinks without exposing himself to risk.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780823269884
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Publication date: 06/01/2016
Series: Perspectives in Continental Philosophy
Pages: 216
Sales rank: 531,466
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Emmanuel Falque is Dean of the Department of Philosophy at The Catholic Institute of Paris. His published works include The Metamorphosis of Finitude: An Essay on Birth and Resurrection (Fordham).

Reuben Shank is a doctoral candidate in religious studies at the University of Virginia.

Matthew Farley is a doctoral candidate in religious studies at the University of Virginia.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction by Matthew Farley

Opening
§1. A Breakthrough §2. A Crossing §3. An Experience

Part I: Interpreting
1. Is Hermeneutics Fundamental?
§4. The Hermeneutical Relief §5. Confessional Hermeneutics §6. Toward a phenomenality of the text
2. For a Hermeneutic of the Body and the Voice
§7. Aphonal Thought §8. The voice is the phenomenon §9. The voice that embodies

Part II: Deciding
3. Always Believing
§10. A belief at the origin §11. The prejudice of the absence of prejudices §12. Faith and Non-Faith
4. Kerygma and Decision
§13. Philosophy of the Decision §14 Theology of the Decision §15 Deciding Together

Part III: Crossing
5. "Tiling" and Conversion
§16 The Horizon of Finitude §17. On "Tiling" or Overlaying §18. Of Conversion or Transformation
6. Finally Theology
§19. From the Threshold to the Leap §20. The Principle of Proportionality §21 A Sigh of Relief

Epilogue: And Then . . .?
§22 First to Live §23 The Afterwards of the Afterwards §24 With an Exposed Face

Notes
Index
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