Intellect, Affect, and God: The Trinity, History, and the Life of Grace by Joseph Ogbonnaya
The wealth of reflection of the contributing authors of this volume-often relatively young-confirms that the influence of Lonergan's thought continues to expand in the areas of philosophy, theology, and the social sciences. It also reveals how Robert M. Doran has expanded on the thought of Lonergan on issues such as psychic conversion and the four-point hypothesis and that these developments are being widely received in diverse interdisciplinary areas including systematic theology, interreligious dialogue, priestly formation, ecology, scriptural hermeneutics, world Christianity, theopolitics, sociology, etc. This collection of essays is relevant not only to Lonergan scholars but to all who are curious about the relevance of Lonergan and Doran studies to contemporary issues.
With essays by Brian Bajzek, Jeremy W. Blackwood, Lucas Briola, Anne M. Carpenter, John P. Cush, John D. Dadosky, Darren J. Dias, Gregory P. Floyd, Joseph K. Gordon, Jonathan Heaps, Ryan Hemmer, Christopher Krall, SJ, Cecille Medina-Maldonado, Joseph C. Mudd, Jacob M. Mudge, Joseph Ogbonnaya, Cyril Orji, Gordon Rixon, SJ, Josephat John Rugaiganisa, Eugene R. Schlesinger, Andrew T. Vink, Gerard Whelan, SJ, and Jaime Vidal Zuniga.
With essays by Brian Bajzek, Jeremy W. Blackwood, Lucas Briola, Anne M. Carpenter, John P. Cush, John D. Dadosky, Darren J. Dias, Gregory P. Floyd, Joseph K. Gordon, Jonathan Heaps, Ryan Hemmer, Christopher Krall, SJ, Cecille Medina-Maldonado, Joseph C. Mudd, Jacob M. Mudge, Joseph Ogbonnaya, Cyril Orji, Gordon Rixon, SJ, Josephat John Rugaiganisa, Eugene R. Schlesinger, Andrew T. Vink, Gerard Whelan, SJ, and Jaime Vidal Zuniga.