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This item is a print on demand title and will be dispatched in 1-3 weeks.

Hardback

£60.00

Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISBN: 9780195067309
Number of Pages: 256
Published: 31/10/1991
Width: 14.6 cm
Height: 21.8 cm
This is a striking and lively reading of John Henry Newman in light, not of his role as autobiographer and prose stylist, but of his beliefs. As Pattison writes, Newman was `an uncontaminated antagonist of everything modern', and his philosophy developed as an attempt to salvage Truth from the liberal scepticisms that had become so prevalent in his day. His greatness, argues Pattison, rests in his theory of belief and his dissent from liberalism, and in his challenge to liberal scholarship to reassess the role of belief in human affairs.

Robert Pattison (Professor of Humanities, Professor of Humanities, Long Island University)

'That Pattison at the end of this brilliantly-reasoned exposition of Newman comes down not on the side of Truth but of heresy is the final drama in this surprisingly dramatic elucidation of ancient quarrels about the salvation of our souls.' Prof. John D. Rosenberg, Columbia University 'The writing is vigorous and combative' B.L. Horne, King's College, London, Theology