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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
11
Richard M. Liddy
Toward Self-Possession: Being at Home in Conscious Performance
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2.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
11
General Index
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3.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
11
Celebrating 14 years of the Bernard J. Lonergan Institute
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4.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
11
Hannah Ferguson
Before Truth: Lonergan, Aquinas, and the Problem of Wisdom
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5.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
11
About the Authors
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6.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
12
Gregory P. Floyd
Introduction:
Understanding What It Is To Understand
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7.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
12
Ryan Miller
“The Diagram is More Important Than is Ordinarily Believed”:
A Picture of Lonergan’s Cognitional Structure
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
12
Eric A. Mabry
The Hypothesis of Esse Secundarium:
Positions and Interpretation
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9.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
12
Chris Berger
Common Sense Problems in Positive Law:
Habermas, Lonergan, and the Problem of the Concrete
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10.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
12
Clayton Shoppa
Anti-Realism and the Desire to Know
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11.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
12
Robert M. Doran, S.J.
Conscience and Newman’s Organum Investigandi
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12.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
12
Tom Jeannot
Hegel Inside Out: Essays on Lonergan’s Debt to Hegel
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13.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
12
Patrick Nolin
Intellect, Affect, and God: The Trinity, History, and the Life of Grace
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14.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
12
Francis J. Hunter
Theology and Science in the Thought of Ian Barbour: A Thomistic Evaluation for the Catholic Doctrine of Creation
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15.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
12
Richard M. Liddy
Converting the Imagination: Teaching to Recover Jesus’s Vision for Fullness of Life
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16.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
12
General Index
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17.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
12
The Bernard J. Lonergan Institute
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18.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
12
About the Authors
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19.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
2 >
Issue: 1
Derek Bianchi Melchin
A Case Study in Functional Payment Classification
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rights & permissions
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.
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The Lonergan Review:
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2 >
Issue: 1
Kenneth R. Melchin
The Morality of Markets
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