•  17
    Kant and Philosophical Knowledge
    New Scholasticism 38 (2): 189-213. 1964.
  •  19
    A Note on Analogy
    New Scholasticism 36 (2): 225-232. 1962.
  •  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
  •  68
    Albert Speer's life offers a paradigm of self-deception, and his autobiography serves to illustrate Fingarette's account of self-deception as a persistent failure to spell out our engagements in the world. Using both Speer and Fingarette, we show how self-deception becomes our lot as the stories we adopt to shape our lives cover up what is destructive in our activity. Had Speer not settled for the neutral label of "architect," he might have found a story substantive enough to allow him to recogn…Read more
  •  6
    Metaphysics in Islamic Philosophy (review)
    New Scholasticism 60 (3): 375-377. 1986.
  •  8
    Portraying Analogy (review)
    New Scholasticism 59 (3): 347-357. 1985.
  •  18
    The Principle of Analogy in Protestant and Catholic Theology (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 4 (4): 624-626. 1964.
  •  34
    Review of abu Hamid al-ghazali, On the Boundaries of Theological Tolerance (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2004 (2). 2004.
  •  19
    John Duns Scotus
    The Monist 49 (4): 639-658. 1965.
  •  14
    The Reality of Time and the Existence of God (review)
    Faith and Philosophy 7 (3): 361-364. 1990.
  •  16
    Analogy, Creation, and Theological Language
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 74 35-52. 2000.
  •  29
    Faith, Culture, and Reason
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 77 1-11. 2003.
    This paper examines how the faith/reason discussion can be expanded by means of culture and analogous language. The author argues that rationaldialogue can occur between different faith traditions, and without having to raise reason to the ideal of enlightenment objectivity or having to jettison reasonthrough some form of relativism. He argues that cultural shifts effect alterations in our very “criteria of rationality” so that our efforts to grasp others’ practices inmatters that challenge our …Read more
  •  8
    Substance
    Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 21 137-160. 1972.
  •  20
  •  24
  •  9
    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
  •  6
    Cambridge Companion to Medieval Jewish Philosophy (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 44 (4): 602-603. 2004.
  •  2
    Knowing the Unknowable God: Ibn-Sina, Maimonides, Aquinas
    International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 23 (2): 119-121. 1988.
  •  39
    A Philosophical Foray into Difference and Dialogue
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 76 (1): 181-194. 2002.
    It would be difficult to find two more paradigmatic interlocutors of Christian theology and Jewish thought than Thomas Aquinas and Moses Maimonides. Yet we are privileged to have in our midst a contemporary philosopher who can be said to have mastered the thought of both and can present them in dialogue. This essay offers a glimpse into Avital Wohlman’s reading of the rich exchange (or lack of exchange) between these two medieval thinkers, assessing the implications of her presentation of their …Read more
  •  15
    God’s Eternity
    Faith and Philosophy 1 (4): 389-406. 1984.
  •  7
    Exercises in religious understanding
    University of Notre Dame Press. 1974.
    The dual purpose of this book is to point out the ways whereby reflective religious thinkers work and to suggest how these skills can be acquired. It is a manual of apprenticeship in acquiring religious understanding. The thought of Augustine, Anselm, Aquinas, Kierkegaard, and Jung on selected religious topics is developed expressly to show how each handled these issues and thus to provide living exemplars for religious understanding. The issues have an inherent unity in their dealing with man's…Read more
  •  6
    Response to Davies, Ahmed, and Valkenberg
    Modern Theology 30 (1): 153-158. 2014.
  •  15
    Radical Orthodoxy
    Philosophy and Theology 16 (1): 73-76. 2004.
    The author presents a brief appreciation of the merits of the Radical Orthodoxy movement. That appreciation centers on four themes: (1) theology as sacra doctrina, (2) countering secular reason in its latest avatar of “post-modernism,” (3) Radical Orthodoxy’s offering a theology of culture, and (4) the Thomism of Radical Orthodoxy. The author concludes with some remarks concerning the reception of Radical Orthodoxy in the United States.
  •  24
    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
  •  13
    Mullā Ṣadrā’s Ontology Revisited
    Journal of Islamic Philosophy 6 45-66. 2010.