The thoughtful heart. The metaphysics of John henry Newman William F. Myers
Idioma: Inglés Editor: Wisconsin Marquette University Press 2013Descripción: 311 páginas 21 cm Tipo de medio:- 9781626006003
- 22 192 M937 Ing
Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Signatura topográfica | Copia número | Estado | Código de barras | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
Seminario Conciliar General | 192 M937 Ing (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) | Ej.1 | Disponible | 91010260 |
Navegando Seminario Conciliar estanterías, Ubicación en estantería: General Cerrar el navegador de estanterías (Oculta el navegador de estanterías)
John Henry Newman. Discursive Enquiries on Metaphysical Subjects.-- Faculty of Abstraction.-- Elements of Thought.-- Proof of Theism.-- Moral Objections to Miracles.-- Formation of Thought.-- Objects of Consciousness.-- Beyond Reason.-- Imagination and Conception.-- The Unseen World.-- On Economical Representation.-- Metaphysical Objections to Miracles.-- Free Will.-- Analogy.-- On Conviction and devotion.-- Editor's Explanatory Notes to Discursive Enquiries.-- Editor's Textual Notes to Duiscursive Enquiries.-- Discursive Enquiries and the Philosophical Tradition.-- The Incidental Philosopher.-- Background From Kant to Frege.-- Discursive Enquiries: A Commentary.-- Newman and Phenomenology, Cognitive Philosophy and Modern Physics
Unlike many of his contemporaries John Henry Newman was comfortable with evolution. This was just one aspect of his lifelong interest in science Newton was something of a hero. Newman had also, of course, thought deeply about religion. So when, in the late 1850s and early 1860s, he began speculating about the nature of reality and specifically about the relation between the physical and human worlds he saw the need to combine a scientific understanding of the physical universe with a Christian understanding of the human person. The Notes he left about this difficult topic were made available in 1970, but they are hard to make sense of. This book presents a readable version of the Notebook and locates them in the cultural and intellectual context of the age. The Newman that emerges is an astonishingly modern thinker, whose ideas bear scrutiny in the light of major philosophical and scientific advances of the twentieth century, from Einstein and Wittgenstein to Turing and Dennett. The Thoughtful Heart opens new insights into Newmans genius and argues that materialism and the concept of a truly unified and radically free human being are not as incompatible as people have thought. Time, Newman wrote, is necessary for the full comprehension and perfection of great ideas. Perhaps this is the time for his own great ideas on metaphysics to be fully comprehended at last.
No hay comentarios en este titulo.