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1. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 11
Jeremy D. Wilkins Political Responsibility in Time of Civil War
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In this article I propose to do five things. First, I describe the present confusion disturbing the tranquility of the American polity. Next, I hypothesize that an important source of civil confusion is that American civildiscourse is generally conducted in two different moral languages. Neither of these is adequate to the reality of the human good, and their speakers are, perhaps increasingly, given to misunderstanding one another. Third, I propose some reasons why not only misunderstanding but even outright hostility seems to be growing. Fourth, I suggest that if we Christians are to be of genuine service to our fellow citizens, we have to begin by emancipating ourselves from inadequate moral languages and renew our capacity to function in a more properly Christian language. Finally, I suggest a possible contribution Christians might make to the renewal of civil discourse.
2. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 11
J. Michael Stebbins Vocation, Business Leadership, and the Pursuit of Understanding
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To have a vocation is to be called to a life of ongoing participation in the redemptive work of the Son and the Holy Spirit. Being faithful to the vocation we have received requires adopting a stance of continuing alertness, ready to notice, correctly interpret, and effectively respond to the various forms of communication by which God draws us into closer cooperation with the redemptive missions of the Son and the Spirit. In this paper I focus on a particular vehicle by which the divine call is transmitted to us—namely, the God-given desire to know, which we experience whenever we wonder about something, whenever we try to solve a problem, whenever we learn or explore or plan.
3. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 11
John D. Dadosky Mediation, Culture, and Religion: Approaching Lonergan’s Method in Theology
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In this paper I explore the “Introduction” to Method in Theology and examine the presuppositions of this importanttext. These are concepts that Lonergan deemed necessary for introducing his work on functional specialization. I focus on mediation as a two-way process and the empirical notion of culture. It is interesting how these two significant ideas make their way into the brief introduction, which Lonergan wrote last when composing the text.
4. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 11
Richard M. Liddy Newman, His Influences, and His Influence
5. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 11
John Laracy Understanding the God of Love: An Essay on Lonergan’s Systematics of the Trinity
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In this paper I argue that the eternal unity of Lonergan’s “three divine subjects” must be understood in light of the eternal love of the divine persons, revealed in Christ’s relationship withthe Father (see esp. John 17). This new starting point in triune agapē need not threaten the integrity of Lonergan’s thought, as long as one reads his psychological analogy as a preliminary heuristic structure. Indeed, the tensions and developments in his own systematics justify this move.
6. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 11
Jeremy W. Blackwood Response to “Understanding the God of Love: An Essay on Lonergan’s Systematics of the Trinity”
7. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 11
David C. Schindler Response to “Understanding the God of Love: An Essay on Lonergan’s Systematics of the Trinity”
8. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 12
Gregory P. Floyd Introduction: Understanding What It Is To Understand
9. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 12
Ryan Miller “The Diagram is More Important Than is Ordinarily Believed”: A Picture of Lonergan’s Cognitional Structure
10. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 12
Eric A. Mabry The Hypothesis of Esse Secundarium: Positions and Interpretation
11. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 12
Chris Berger Common Sense Problems in Positive Law: Habermas, Lonergan, and the Problem of the Concrete
12. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 12
Clayton Shoppa Anti-Realism and the Desire to Know
13. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 12
Robert M. Doran, S.J. Conscience and Newman’s Organum Investigandi
14. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 2 > Issue: 1
Derek Bianchi Melchin A Case Study in Functional Payment Classification
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Need the moral be repeated? There exist two distinct circuits, each with its own final market. The equilibrium of the economic process is conditioned by the balance of the two circuits: each must be allowed the possibility of continuity, of basic outlay yielding an equal basic income and surplus outlay yieldingan equal surplus income, of basic and surplus income yielding equal basic and surplus expenditure, and of these grounding equivalent basic and surplus outlay. But what cannot be tolerated, much less sustained, is for one circuit to be drained by the other. That is the essence of dynamic disequilibrium.
15. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 2 > Issue: 1
Kenneth R. Melchin The Morality of Markets
16. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 2 > Issue: 1
Philip McShane Imaging International Credit
17. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 2 > Issue: 1
Joseph Bishop Lonergan’s Economic Perspective
18. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 2 > Issue: 1
Peter Corbishley Lonergan Meets the Mutual Housing Sector?
19. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 2 > Issue: 1
Eileen De Neeve Response to Patrick H. Byrne
20. The Lonergan Review: Volume > 2 > Issue: 1
Jaime Price Circulating Grace: Resources for a Just Economy