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61. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1994 > Issue: 1
Joseph Fitzpatrick Reading as Understanding
62. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1994 > Issue: 1
Martin J. Matuštík Democratic Multicultures and Cosmopolis: Beyond the Aporias of the Politics of Identity and Difference
63. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1994 > Issue: 1
Jerome Miller A Reply to Michael Maxwell
64. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1994 > Issue: 2
Bernard J. F. Lonergan, SJ Philosophy and the Religious Phenomenon
65. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1994 > Issue: 2
Frederick E. Crowe, SJ Lonergan's Universalist View of Religion
66. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1994 > Issue: 2
F. E. Crowe Lonergan's "Philosophy and the Religious Phenomenon": Editor's Preface
67. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1994 > Issue: 2
Cynthia S. W. Crysdale Lonergan's "Philosophy and the Religious Phenomenon": A Commentary
68. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1994 > Issue: 2
John van den Hengel, SCJ God with/out Being
69. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1994 > Issue: 2
Philip Boo Riley Religious Studies Methodology: Bernard Lonergan's Contribution
70. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1994 > Issue: 2
Elizabeth A. Morelli Post-Hegelian Elements in Lonergan's Philosophy of Religion
71. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1994 > Issue: 2
Bernard McGinn Theological Reflections on "Philosophy and the Religious Phenomenon"
72. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1994 > Issue: 2
J. Michael Stebbins What Did Lonergan Really Say about Aquinas's Theory of the Will?
73. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1995 > Issue: 1
Joseph Fitzpatrick 'Town Criers of Inwardness' or Reflections on Rorty
74. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1995 > Issue: 1
Philip McShane General Method
75. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1995 > Issue: 1
Frank Braio Towards the Re-Horizoning of Subjects: Re-Structuring Classical-Modern Educational Perspectives
76. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1995 > Issue: 1
Giovanni B. Sala Kant and Lonergan on Insight Into the Sensible
77. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1995 > Issue: 1
Jerome Miller "All Love is Self-Surrender"
78. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1995 > Issue: 1
Michael P. Maxwell, Jr. Deconstruction or Genuineness: A Response to Jerome Miller
79. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1995 > Issue: 2
Thomas J. McPartland Consciousness and Normative Subjectivity: Lonergan's Unique Foundational Enterprise
80. Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies: Year > 1995 > Issue: 2
William F. Ryan, SJ Edmund Husserl and the 'Rätsel' of Knowledge
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The aim of this paper has been a brief examination of Husserl's notion of the riddle of knowing with a comparison to Lonergan's notion of wonder and the intention of being. The examination was undertaken by relating Husserl's concept of a riddle essentially to these central themes: wonder, epoche, and intentionality, with concomitant references to Lonergan's analogous notions. The paper was thus divided into two sections to address these themes of Husserl and Lonergan: Part I: "The Riddle of Knowing"; and Part II: "Wonder and Intentionality." The paper shows that for Husserl the very fact of human knowing in its correlation to transcendence is the riddle, and it shows that for Lonergan the subject wonders at this correlation, and consciously engages its structure of knowing and loving.