A collection of essays assimilating and applying philosopher David Walshs new personalist language of persons.
The noted professor David Walsh has called for a new "personalist language of persons," with vast implications in a variety of academic fields. Moving away from a language that refers to persons as things, and seeks to find connections and relations within all of us. In Personalism for the Twenty-First Century: Essays in Honor of David Walsh, a diverse group of scholars apply and extend Walsh's unique personalist approach to political theory, theology, and current events. It is a collection of refreshingly original essays for those interested in exploring the potential of a renewed personalist thought for addressing the crises of our afflicted age.
Recenzijas
The distinguished authors whose essays honour David Walsh and his work have produced a close and sensitive reading of a complex and subtle political philosopher. Walshs understanding of the person and of political life forms the tacit and sometimes explicit focus of essays on a wide range of authors, from Böhme and Kierkegaard to Strauss and Voegelin, and of subjects, from the American mind and realism in international relations theory to the COVID-19 event. This volume is a model for what a Festschrift can be. -- Barry Cooper, University of Calgary
Papildus informācija
A collection of essays assimilating and applying philosopher David Walshs new personalist language of persons.
Introduction: The New Personalist Language in Praxis
Chapter 1: David Walsh on the Form of the American Mind
Chapter 2: Kierkegaard on Friendship at the Culmination of the Modern
Philosophical Revolution
Chapter 3: The Experiential Roots of the Innerworldly: The Place of Jakob
Böhme in David Walshs Personalism
Chapter 4: A Portrait: An Epiphany of the Human Person
Chapter 5: Luminosity Before Theory: Walsh on the Transcendence of the
Person
Chapter 6: Rediscovering Persons as the Imago Dei through David Walshs
Philosophy of the Person
Chapter 7: The Luminosity of Existence and the Inside of History
Chapter 8: What Is a New Normal: Between Personalism and Biopolitics
Chapter 9: The Path to Mutuality: Eric Voegelin's Influence on David Walsh
Chapter 10: Classic Natural Right
Chapter 11: The Personal Being of Humanity: Voegelin and Walsh on Universal
Community and Global Order
Richard Avramenko is director of the School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership at Arizona State University and editor-in-chief of The Political Science Reviewer
Thomas W. Holman is interim director of Intelligence Studies and adjunct professor at the Catholic University of America.