Mounier and Maritain

Mounier and Maritain

Author: Joseph Anthony Amato

Publisher:

Published: 1975

Total Pages: 215

ISBN-13: 9780970610638

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A study of Emmanuel Mounier, founder of Personalism, and Jacques Maritian, significant contributor to revival of Catholic thought and Thomism, and two generations of French Catholic intellectuals, this book examines the gulf between nineteenth century Catholic tradition and the twentieth-century European events. Amato's brilliant 1975 study of Mounier and Maritain's attempts to find a Catholic understanding of a world marked by total war, genocide, totalitarianism, mass society and the loss of faith in democracy shows us how much we still need to comprehend that period if we are to undeerstand our new century as Catholics and Christians.


Communitarian Third Way

Communitarian Third Way

Author: John Hellman

Publisher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 332

ISBN-13: 9780773523760

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This is an incisive look at Alexandre Marc's elite Ordre Nouveau movement, one of the earliest and most influential attempts to work with the German youth movements of the 1930s.


Between the 'Mysticism of Politics' and the 'Politics of Mysticism'

Between the 'Mysticism of Politics' and the 'Politics of Mysticism'

Author: David Ranson

Publisher: ATF Press

Published: 2013-08-31

Total Pages: 337

ISBN-13: 1922239372

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Between the Politics of Mysticism and the Mysticism of Politics traces the dialectic of 'the mystical' and the political' from both a theological and an historical perspective. It presents the dialectic as a hermeneutic for the rise of the new ecclesial communities within the Roman Catholic Tradition and suggests it as the framework by which a trajectory for Christian holiness might emerge in the 21st century.


Personalism

Personalism

Author: Emmanuel Mounier

Publisher: University of Notre Dame Pess

Published: 1989-08-31

Total Pages: 116

ISBN-13: 0268161380

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This volume, first published a year before Mounier’s death, is his final definition of personalism. It is an eloquent and lucid statement of a perspective in which “man’s supreme adventure is to fight injustice wherever it is found and whatever the consequences” (from the Foreword).


Liberty, Wisdom, and Grace

Liberty, Wisdom, and Grace

Author: John Hittinger

Publisher: Lexington Books

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 344

ISBN-13: 9780739104125

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Twentieth-century French philosophers Jacques Maritain and Yves R. Simon pioneered new approaches to understanding and defending political democracy in the wake of two world wars. Rather than break from a religious tradition that seemed to struggle against modernity and certain forms of democratic theory and practice, these thinkers instead looked back to the philosophy of Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas to propel Catholic political philosophy forward. The profound influence of Maritain and Simon is manifest in the dramatic achievements of Vatican II and in the work of the scholars of political philosophy who learned from them. John P. Hittinger, one of the finest of these scholars, provides in Liberty, Wisdom, and Grace a comprehensive survey of the Thomists' contributions to contemporary political thought as well as a detailed analysis of their approach to democracy. Hittinger treats criticism of Maritain, including the work of Catholic political writer Aurel Kolnai, and discusses the alternative democratic visions of John Locke and David Richards. His portraits of thinkers who have wrestled with democracy in the Thomist tradition, such as Leo Strauss and John Paul II, are sensitive and engaging. Addressing questions of religion and philosophy broadly understood, the essays collected here offer a searching examination of democratic theory in the modern age.


Jacques Maritain in the 21st Century

Jacques Maritain in the 21st Century

Author: Walter Schultz

Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Published: 2022-03-01

Total Pages: 330

ISBN-13: 1527578755

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From his rebellious youth through his yearning for sainthood as one of the 20th century’s leading Christian philosophers, the quest for liberation defines Jacques Maritain (1882-1973). Throughout the 20th century, Maritain rejected the egocentric isolation rampant throughout liberal society, as well as totalitarian collectivism. Maritain promoted the human person, open by way of nature and grace to integral liberation and redemption through authentic community. This book argues that Maritain contributes to our understanding in the 21st century of the myriad, yet coalescing, movements seeking to address global economic sustainability, the fostering of human rights and participatory democracy. Through a series of papers published over the course of more than 20 years, from the tail-end of the 20th century through the first decades of the 21st century, Maritain’s social and political thought engages contemporary thinkers and movements with penetrating insight.