John et al,
I’ve read yours and Pierre’s text “Attentive, Intelligent, Rational, and Responsible: Transforming Economics to Save the Planet” at a ‘turtle pace’ …
It deserves several serious papers trying to interpret and clarify various aspects of its complex argument, especially in an effort to discern its relevance to our present situation as a species … a relevance, in my opinion, that is quite high. Nevertheless, it requires considerable effort, even grace, to allow oneself to be drawn into the complexity of the proper text’s argument (and that of the many footnotes) regarding Lonergan’s overall relevance for our times …
Allow me one example or illustration since a few of us have wrestled with Karl Rahner’s ‘Spirit in the World’ over this past winter.
You mention at p. 34 how Rahner was critical of Lonergan because he felt that what was specific in Christianity gets lost in Lonergan’s methodology. You say in footnote #92 that you do not agree with Rahner and that in some sense he missed the point of ‘Method in Theology’ and its transdisciplinary and transcultural reach. You mention how in large part your own commitment in the text is to a glocal secularity and you believe with Lonergan that this GEM-FS approach is well suited to the present world’s vast challenges and complexities, and for moving towards a viable future world.
Given my ‘Christian-Marxist dialogue’ hermeneutic key and frame of reference for approaching your challenging text (and its actual advances for such a dialogue), I would tend to agree with your response to Rahner. And yet having resurfaced from this very recent in depth reading of Rahner I remain a bit uneasy, ... and so I must note that Rahner’s 'specificity' for Christian theology is not really identified in your text (specificity that perhaps all of us tend to forget or overlook, I know that I do ...).
So here I’d like to recycle and revisit, (see attached) albeit briefly, by way of an attachment a summation of an exchange on this good Lonergan discussion forum from several years ago where this ‘specificity’ in relation to a section of ‘Insight’ was tackled with Gilson in mind. What is quite striking is just how similar Rahner’s concern is to the concern, at that time, expressed by me in Gilsonian terms.
So, having read your text, I agree that there is a sense in which Rahner, may very well have missed the central point of Lonergan’s MiT. But then again there is a sense in which Gilson and Rahner, as Christian theoreticians-metaphysicians, may have a valid point that Lonerganians may also need to take into consideration in this vast and complex project of engaging and confronting these challenging complexities of our world …..
To be
continued (and again, for those interested, see attached)
Hugh
Hugh, you have the ability to highlight important issues. Pope Leo XIV may have been elected to the papal chair because in his career as an Augustinian priest and bishop he exemplified solidarity with the poor and oppressed. In our book Pierre and I followed a similar path, namely solidarity with Christian teachings both in the Bible and with how the Church has responded beginning with Leo XIII to the writings of Karl Marx. Lonergan's overall writings are also along that line, John
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<Lonergan on Reflective Interpretation and a Gilsonian Critique.doc>