The Anthropological Turn: The Human Orientation of Karl Rahner
The form and content of the study of theology in the present, modern epoch are marked by a vast quantity and variety of the most diverse and, in part, the most divergent points of departure. The classical unity and perspicuity of the world of theological thought, so typical in earlier centuries, has dissolved with the plurality of the horizons and problems of modern thinking. The reality of the world, science, and theology appears no longer as a single “orbis,” but rather as an open and unbounded space. Indeed, precisely for the study of theology in modern universities, the catchphrase, the “new vastness,” thus appears to hold as well.

This book is intended to provide Christians and theologians with an access to Karl Rahner to unpack his thinking and to make a theological inspection of his work possible. In this respect it is essential to locate the central point of departure for the theology of Karl Rahner in the concerns and questions of human beings and, to take a cue from the key concept of the “anthropological point of departure,” to make understandable the underlying tendency of Rahner’s work.

Mastering scientific inquiries in the everyday praxis of contemporary theological studies of necessity often takes the unsatisfactory form of a compilation of various essays, articles, and contributions to handbooks. Precisely for this reason, immersing oneself in the work of an epochally significant author, in the world of his thoughts, and in his theological profile—as here in the case of the theology of Karl Rahner—ought to be, not only a dutiful exercise, but a delightful change of pace, perhaps even a passion: studium in the proper sense of the word.

1117395866
The Anthropological Turn: The Human Orientation of Karl Rahner
The form and content of the study of theology in the present, modern epoch are marked by a vast quantity and variety of the most diverse and, in part, the most divergent points of departure. The classical unity and perspicuity of the world of theological thought, so typical in earlier centuries, has dissolved with the plurality of the horizons and problems of modern thinking. The reality of the world, science, and theology appears no longer as a single “orbis,” but rather as an open and unbounded space. Indeed, precisely for the study of theology in modern universities, the catchphrase, the “new vastness,” thus appears to hold as well.

This book is intended to provide Christians and theologians with an access to Karl Rahner to unpack his thinking and to make a theological inspection of his work possible. In this respect it is essential to locate the central point of departure for the theology of Karl Rahner in the concerns and questions of human beings and, to take a cue from the key concept of the “anthropological point of departure,” to make understandable the underlying tendency of Rahner’s work.

Mastering scientific inquiries in the everyday praxis of contemporary theological studies of necessity often takes the unsatisfactory form of a compilation of various essays, articles, and contributions to handbooks. Precisely for this reason, immersing oneself in the work of an epochally significant author, in the world of his thoughts, and in his theological profile—as here in the case of the theology of Karl Rahner—ought to be, not only a dutiful exercise, but a delightful change of pace, perhaps even a passion: studium in the proper sense of the word.

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The Anthropological Turn: The Human Orientation of Karl Rahner

The Anthropological Turn: The Human Orientation of Karl Rahner

by Anton Losinger
The Anthropological Turn: The Human Orientation of Karl Rahner

The Anthropological Turn: The Human Orientation of Karl Rahner

by Anton Losinger

Hardcover(3)

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Overview

The form and content of the study of theology in the present, modern epoch are marked by a vast quantity and variety of the most diverse and, in part, the most divergent points of departure. The classical unity and perspicuity of the world of theological thought, so typical in earlier centuries, has dissolved with the plurality of the horizons and problems of modern thinking. The reality of the world, science, and theology appears no longer as a single “orbis,” but rather as an open and unbounded space. Indeed, precisely for the study of theology in modern universities, the catchphrase, the “new vastness,” thus appears to hold as well.

This book is intended to provide Christians and theologians with an access to Karl Rahner to unpack his thinking and to make a theological inspection of his work possible. In this respect it is essential to locate the central point of departure for the theology of Karl Rahner in the concerns and questions of human beings and, to take a cue from the key concept of the “anthropological point of departure,” to make understandable the underlying tendency of Rahner’s work.

Mastering scientific inquiries in the everyday praxis of contemporary theological studies of necessity often takes the unsatisfactory form of a compilation of various essays, articles, and contributions to handbooks. Precisely for this reason, immersing oneself in the work of an epochally significant author, in the world of his thoughts, and in his theological profile—as here in the case of the theology of Karl Rahner—ought to be, not only a dutiful exercise, but a delightful change of pace, perhaps even a passion: studium in the proper sense of the word.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780823220663
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Publication date: 01/01/2000
Series: Moral Philosophy and Moral Theology , #2
Edition description: 3
Pages: 112
Product dimensions: 5.25(w) x 8.25(h) x (d)

About the Author

Anton Losinger currently resides in Germany. He was recently Visiting Professorial Lecturer at the School of Philosophy of the Catholic University of America.

Table of Contents

Translator's Forewordvii
Foreword to the Second Editionxv
Forewordxvii
Preliminary Remarks: The Anthropological Point of Departure in the Theology of Karl Rahnerxix
Introductionxxix
1.The "Anthropological Turn" in the Theology of Karl Rahner1
The Grounding of the Possibility and Necessity of the Anthropological "Turn"2
The Philosophical Background6
The Ambi-valence of the Point of Departure12
2.The Content of the Starting Point: Theology as Anthropology23
The Experience of the Self and the Experience of God25
Nature and Grace: The Intersection of Human Transcendentality and God's Communication of Himself35
God Becoming Human: Theology and Anthropology in the "Hypostatic Union" of the Event of Christ41
Overview: The Anthropologically Mediated Content of Theological Themes46
3.The Formal-Methodical Starting Point: Theology as Transcendental Reflection54
The Turn to the Subject59
Transcendentality and History67
Overview: The Foundation of the Anthropological Point of Departure in Transcendental Theology76
Excursus: On the Relation of Philosophy and Theology against the Backdrop of "Transcendental Revelation"85
Postscript: Is Transcendental Anthropology the Adequate Form for Contemporary Theology?91
Bibliography95
Index of Names Cited111
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