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John Henry Newman on the Nature of the Mind

Reason in Religion, Science, and the Humanities

John Henry Newman on the Nature of the Mind

Reason in Religion, Science, and the Humanities

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

Hardback

£87.00

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
ISBN: 9780739140475
Number of Pages: 128
Published: 29/12/2010
Width: 16.3 cm
Height: 24 cm

From his vantage point in the nineteenth century, John Henry Newman offers much needed clarity to the twenty-first century, an age characterized by significant tension between science and religion and by a marginalization of the humanities. As a philosopher, theologian, priest, and man of Letters, he sheds light on our modern age by distinguishing between the different ways reason functions in science, religion, and literature. During his time, in response to a looming crisis in both religion and education, Newman challenged the usurpation of reason by science and empirical philosophy. He affirmed the need for the opening of the modern mind to other equally legitimate ways of knowing and defended the kinds of reason cultivated in the liberal arts.

Jane Rupert delves into John Henry Newman's perception of the magisterial function of the imagination in both poetry and our knowledge of God, contributing unique insight into the study of his thought and showing how well it serves us to study this important nineteenth-century Catholic thinker. She presents a deep reflection of Newman's thought on several fronts, including intellectual history, theories of knowing, the controversy between science and religion, the defense of the liberal arts, and the aims of Catholic education.

Jane Rupert

Jane Rupert holds a PhD in English from the University of Toronto. Her previous publications include Uneasy Relations: Reason in Literature and Science from Aristotle to Darwin and Blake.

This book draws chiefly from Newman's Idea of a University, a work particularly relevant today as Catholic universities explore their identities as both Catholic and academic institutions. This book would be an excellent companion and study guide for anyone who wants to understand the context and content of Newman's Idea of a University. The book is written at an intermediate to advanced level; anyone with some previous exposure to Newman will find this work very beneficial. * The Heythrop Journal *