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Ronald L. Hall
The Primacy Of The Explicit:
On Keeping Romanticism At Bay
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Polanyi’s claim that a wholly tacit knowledge is possible is contested. Polanyi’s praise for the tacit, and his critique of the ideal of total explicitness, harbors a threat of Romanticism, which, in turn, may become a threat to the value of the explicit itself, and ultimately a political threat, something that Heidegger’s anti-Enlightenment philosophy and political life manifested all too dramatically. Polanyians must not lose sight of the primacy of the explicit for personal existence, something that Polanyi’s work need not undermine, and indeed, that has the resources to affirm and support.
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Notes on Contributors
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Walter Gulick
Humans and the Earth:
Toward a Personal Ecology
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Report on 1997 Annual Polanyi Society Meeting
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Call for Papers for 1998 Polanyi Society Meeting
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Richard Gelwick
Faith as a First Principle in Charles McCoy’s Theology and Ethics
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Charles McCoy’s Christian theology and ethics are based in a covenantal understanding that provides a way for Christians to engage the many views in the modern university. McCoy’s approach has both openness and commitment; it is akin to and supported by the fiduciary thought of Johannes Cocceius, H. R. Niebuhr, and Michael Polanyi. By seeing the way faith as trust operates in human beings, McCoy has laid foundations for Christian theology in a muticultural and pluralistic age. Most important is McCoy’s argument that there are many theologies, even Christian theologies, and the life of Chrisitian faith is always one of growth and of exploration.
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Philip A. Rolnick
The Innovating Covenant:
Exploring The Work Of Charles S. McCoy
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Charles McCoy’s lifework calls for covenantal understanding and commitment as a call to innovation in theology and ethics. McCoy embraces liberation, pluralism, and globalism as the solution to the current difficulties of theology. As he looks toward the future, McCoy rejects positions which lament and tend to obstruct the movement toward liberation, pluralism, and globalism.
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News and Notes
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Membership Information
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Tradition and Discovery: The Polanyi Society Periodical:
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Charles S. McCoy
A Response to the Essays On My Thought
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Phil Mullins
Permutations of Post-Critical Thinking:
Themes in Charles McCoy’s Life and Thought
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This essay reviews the contributions of Charles S. McCoy in three areas: religion and higher education, theology and ethics. I analyze McCoy’s primary ideas as a blending of influences from covenantal theology, Plato, Michael Polanyi and H. Richard Niebuhr.
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Phil Mullins
Preface
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Doug Adams
Charles S. McCoy:
Orphic Sleuth of the Seminary As School of the Dance
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S. R. Jha
Polanyi’s Integrative Philosophy and My New Interpretation:
A Response to Pflug’s Review
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In this response to Jeff Pflug’s review of my dissertation Michael Polanyi’s Integrative Philosophy, I note that Pflug focused on my discussion of possible extension of Polanyi’s epistemology; he has also taken my statements on scientific truth out of context. In addition, he ignored the four major elements of the dissertation, thereby not giving the reader a “map” to the meaning and the rationale of the work – an intellectual biography of Polanyi.
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