Guides for the Journey
John MacMurray, Bernard Lonergan, and James Fowler
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Paperback / softback
£51.00
Publisher: University Press of America
ISBN: 9780761801825
Number of Pages: 236
Published: 19/03/1996
Width: 13.8 cm
Height: 21.6 cm
Guides for the Journey is an introduction to the lives and thoughts of three significant thinkers: John Macmurray, Bernard Lonergan, and James Fowler. The book shows how their work is helpful in interpreting our lives and the world in which we live. Written for the introductory student or reader, this book makes Macmurray, Lonergan, and Fowler's work more accessible and is the first book to actually compare the thought of the three. Throughout the book, quotations from their writings help the reader to absorb and appreciate the texture and meaning of their work. Readers are not presumed to be familiar with philosophy or the meaning of technical terms used. An index and a glossary of names and key terms provide easy reference tools. Endnotes and a bibliography will stimulate further reading on the subject. Guides for the Journey is highly appropriate for university courses in religion as well as religious workshops and lectures. Contents: List of Tables; Preface; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Endnotes; John Macmurray (1891-1976); Endnotes; Macmurray's Characterization of the Personal Life; Endnotes; Bernard Lonergan; Endnotes; Lonergan's Understanding of Understanding; Endnotes; James Fowler (b.1940); Endnotes; Fowler's Faith Development Theory; Endnotes; A Summing Up; Endnotes; Glossary; Bibliography; Index.
...presentd a remarkably readable essay on each of the three thinkers...a rare book in its clarity and passion...provides the general readerand introductory student with excellent briefings on the three scholars presented while at the same time proposing a deeply felt synthesis which engages the more sophisticated reader. * Humanities * ...presentd a remarkably readable essay on each of the three thinkers...a rare book in its clarity and passion...provides the general readerand introductory student with excellent briefings on the three scholars presented while at the same time proposing a deeply felt synthesis which engages the more sophisticated reader. * Humanities *