Philosophy and Theology

Volume 7, Issue 2, Winter 1992

Andrew Tallon
Pages 165-183

The Experience of Grace in Relation to Rahner’s Philosophy of the Heart

The correct understanding of the concept of heart in Rahner consists in a recognition that the highest performance of a finite spirit comprises affective, cognitive, and volitional consciousness in a functional union that could be called the heart-mind. Rather than privilege cognition and volition and then consider feelings and moods as separate and purely subjective phenomena, we must recognize the intentionality of certain higher affective responses, i.e., those that have become integrated into the highest operational synthesis of a person who is developing as an adult in matters ethical and mystical. The highest actions of such a person are intersubjective faith, love, and hope.