• Al-ghazali, Aquinas, and created freedom
    In Jeremiah Hackett, William E. Murnion & Carl N. Still (eds.), Being and thought in Aquinas, Global Academic. 2004.
  • Freedom and Creation in Three Traditions
    International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 37 (3): 181-183. 1995.
  •  146
    The Unknowability of God in Al-Ghazali
    Religious Studies 23 (2): 171-182. 1987.
    The main lines of this exploration are quite simply drawn. That the God whom Jews, Christians, and Muslims worship outstrips our capacities for characterization, and hence must be unknowable, will be presumed as uncontested. The reason that God is unknowable stems from our shared confession that ‘the Holy One, blessed be He’, and ‘the Father almighty, creator of heaven and earth’, and certainly ‘Allah, the merciful One’ is one ; and just why God's oneness entails God's being unknowable deserves …Read more
  •  54
    Christian Revelation and the Completion of the Aristotelian Revolution
    Review of Metaphysics 43 (1): 172-172. 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
  •  60
    Spirit, Saints and Immortality (review)
    Faith and Philosophy 4 (3): 343-344. 1987.
  •  48
    Beyond a Theory of Analogy
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 46 (n/a): 114-122. 1972.