•  24
    Religious Life and Understanding
    Review of Metaphysics 22 (4). 1969.
    In a further bit of irony, disaffection with higher education has shifted that peculiar mode of understanding that we call religious into a rather privileged position. To be sure, many of those people who call themselves religious would not engage in this sort of understanding, but that need not detain us here. The central point of these reflections will be an attempt to display a mode of understanding which one might properly call religious. I shall undertake this from a frankly philosophical p…Read more
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    Creator/Creatures Relation
    Faith and Philosophy 25 (2): 177-189. 2008.
    Can philosophical inquiry into divinity be authentic to its subject, God, without adapting its categories to the challenges of its scriptural inspiration, be that biblical or Quranic? This essay argues that it cannot, and that the adaptation, while it can be articulated in semantic terms, must rather amount to a transformation of standard philosophical strategies. Indeed, without such a radical transformation, “philosophy of religion” will inevitably mislead us into speaking of a “god” rather th…Read more
  •  23
    Christians, Muslims (and Jews) before the One God: Jean Daniélou on Mission Revisited
    Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 61 (1): 34-41. 2007.
    The reflections of Jean Daniélou on the relationship of Christianity to non-Christian religions, in light of missionary activity; offer a means to assess our current situation. Using a key insight of Bernard Lonergan, this essay offers a reprise of nearly sixty years of theological practice. Recent reflections by Tariq Ramadan help us to see ways of bringing these to an institutional focus
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    Christian Revelation and the Completion of the Aristotelian Revolution (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 43 (1): 172-173. 1989.
    This work offers a bold and illuminating exercise in philosophy as narrative, and in doing so presents itself quite consciously as an alternative mode of explanation to the "rationalist paradigm" which dominated Greek philosophy. Yet while acknowledging the inspiration of Hegel, the work hews far more closely than the author of Phänomenologie des Geistes to the actual dialectic of explanation as it worked itself out from Aristotle through Plotinus to Aquinas--to mention only the most prominent m…Read more
  •  22
    Aristotle and ‘Future Contingencies’
    Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 13 (n/a): 37-52. 1964.
  •  21
    Three Thomist Studies (review)
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 77 (3): 459-460. 2003.
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    Science, Perception and Reality
    Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 13 (n/a): 218-224. 1964.
    A host of factors, technical and cultural, have combined in our day to establish the journal article as the genre of philosophical writing. The next step is to collect them in the more available format of a book. Whatever be one’s judgment of the practice, it seems established; and, we think, in the case of Sellars’ offerings, is a fortunate one. One may more readily take the measure of a meticulous and probing philosophical mind by surveying its work over a ten-year span. But a collation of ess…Read more
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    Being and Goodness (review)
    Faith and Philosophy 9 (4): 538-543. 1992.
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    David Braine’s Project
    Faith and Philosophy 13 (2): 163-178. 1996.
    The author of The Reality of Time and the Existence of God turns his critical conceptual acumen to finding an intellectually viable path between the current polarities of dualism and materialism. By considering human beings as language-using animals he can critically appraise “representational” views of concept formation, as well as show how current “research programs” which presuppose a “materialist” basis stem from an unwitting adoption of a dualist picture of mind and body. His alternative is…Read more
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    A Note on Analogy
    New Scholasticism 36 (2): 225-232. 1962.
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    John Duns Scotus
    The Monist 49 (4): 639-658. 1965.
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    C. S. Peirce
    International Philosophical Quarterly 5 (4): 521-540. 1965.
  •  18
    Al-Ghaz'lî (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 39 (3): 358-359. 1999.
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    The Principle of Analogy in Protestant and Catholic Theology (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 4 (4): 624-626. 1964.
  •  17
    Evil and Suffering in Jewish Philosophy (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 37 (3): 360-362. 1997.
  •  17
    Graceful Reason (review)
    New Scholasticism 62 (2): 239-241. 1988.
  •  16
    Kant and Philosophical Knowledge
    New Scholasticism 38 (2): 189-213. 1964.
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    The Logic of Analogy (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 2 (4): 633-642. 1962.
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    Analogy, Creation, and Theological Language
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 74 35-52. 2000.