何塞-弗朗西斯科-莫拉莱斯-托雷斯(José Francisco Morales Torres)所著的《奇迹是神学人类学、宗教和神学中的后殖民和非殖民化研究的新起点》(评论)。

IF 0.2 4区 哲学 0 RELIGION
Jeffrey Dudiak
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We tour twentieth-century phenomenology and visit a representative medieval ontologist from each of the Jewish, Christian, and Islamic traditions to provide a new vista upon theological anthropology, with implications for our understanding of some of our central and perennial ethical values. Its unifying theme is \"wonder.\" While the author brings a broad and admirable erudition to this book, in style and substance he is more encyclopedic than incisive. I enjoyed learning from each of the parts but was less persuaded by the book's argument as a whole.</p> <p>The first chapter is a phenomenology of \"wonder,\" which emerges as \"an encounter between the 'excess-with' of the other, that acts first, and the available openness of the self\" (p. 41). While the analyses of the chapter are both interesting and credible, I would have been more convinced had there been more focus on a sustained phenomenological analysis of wonder itself so that the reader could \"see\" what is being described, rather than being given a ready-made description of the phenomenon.</p> <p>In Chapter 2, Torres attempts \"a metaphysical inquiry [that] allows one to go where phenomenology cannot and propose what [ontological structure] may lie behind the phenomenon of wonder\" (p. 50). Here, the anti-metaphysical concerns that motivated so much of the phenomenological movement are ignored, and the phenomenology that the book advocates is unproblematically shown to not only open up upon, but also to require, a metaphysical grounding. The author attempts to cover this objection in his conclusion by claiming that he accepts \"phenomenology as a method, but not as an ideology that discourages or rejects the metaphysical enterprise\" (p. 181). He shows how the metaphysics that \"'stands under' the ontological dialectic between identity and difference that is present in the event of wonder\" (p. 181) is developed across the doctrine of \"participation\" as it emerges across a reading of three medieval metaphysicians: Ibn Gabirol (Jewish), Ibn Arabi (Islamic), and Thomas Aquinas (Christian). All three ground this participation in \"generosity,\" which Torres presents as a metaphysical condition of possibility for, and a key moment in, the \"experience\" of wonder. <strong>[End Page 289]</strong></p> <p>Torres proceeds toward his renewal of theological/anthropological by working from this idea of God as Generosity itself (and creation as God's gift perennially given as the gift and call of God to humanity) to our wondrous, subjective attunement as humans to this giving—an infinite response at the core of our human being, directed toward God in faith. In the final chapter, Torres dissects the event of wonder and correlates an ethical stance with sustainability, solidarity, and vulnerability, all synthesized under the rubric of liberation. From phenomenology to metaphysics to theology to ethics—there is a lot here!</p> <p>The text is plagued by a disappointing number of small errors (e.g., the wrong verb endings repeatedly attached to simple words), making following the already thick prose even harder. On the positive side, Torres writes well and provides regular summaries throughout, indicating how the disparate analyses of the book are meant to hang together. Nevertheless, following the thread of the argument was a struggle. I found myself wondering whether \"wonder\" was a thread substantial enough to support the weight of the diverse analyses hanging upon it. \"Wonder\" wandered in and out, centering the analyses for a while before giving way to other themes, the author then attempting to show how all of these paths lead back to \"wonder\"—sometimes more successfully than others. 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Here, the anti-metaphysical concerns that motivated so much of the phenomenological movement are ignored, and the phenomenology that the book advocates is unproblematically shown to not only open up upon, but also to require, a metaphysical grounding. The author attempts to cover this objection in his conclusion by claiming that he accepts \\\"phenomenology as a method, but not as an ideology that discourages or rejects the metaphysical enterprise\\\" (p. 181). He shows how the metaphysics that \\\"'stands under' the ontological dialectic between identity and difference that is present in the event of wonder\\\" (p. 181) is developed across the doctrine of \\\"participation\\\" as it emerges across a reading of three medieval metaphysicians: Ibn Gabirol (Jewish), Ibn Arabi (Islamic), and Thomas Aquinas (Christian). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者 何塞-弗朗西斯科-莫拉莱斯-托雷斯(José Francisco Morales Torres)著,《奇迹作为神学人类学、宗教与神学中的后殖民与非殖民研究的新起点》,杰弗里-杜迪亚克(Jeffrey Dudiak)译,何塞-弗朗西斯科-莫拉莱斯-托雷斯(José Francisco Morales Torres)著,《奇迹作为神学人类学、宗教与神学中的后殖民与非殖民研究的新起点》。Lanham, MD: Lexington Books (Rowman and Littlefield), 2023。第 226 页。布版 100.00 美元,电子书 45.00 美元。本书研究范围广泛,引用和引用了多个学科的大量资料,令人印象深刻。我们参观了二十世纪的现象学,并访问了犹太教、基督教和伊斯兰教传统中各一位具有代表性的中世纪本体论学者,为神学人类学提供了新的视角,对我们理解一些核心的、永恒的伦理价值产生了影响。本书的统一主题是 "奇迹"。虽然作者为本书带来了令人钦佩的广博学识,但在风格和内容上,他更像是百科全书,而非精辟之作。我喜欢从每一部分中学习,但对全书的论点却不太信服。第一章是关于 "惊奇 "的现象学,"惊奇 "是 "首先行动的他者的'过度与'与自我的开放性之间的相遇"(第 41 页)。虽然这一章的分析既有趣又可信,但如果能更注重对 "惊奇 "本身进行持续的现象学分析,让读者 "看到 "所描述的内容,而不是给读者一个现成的现象描述,我会更信服。在第 2 章中,托雷斯尝试 "一种形而上学的探究,[这种探究]使人们能够进入现象学无法进入的领域,并提出在惊奇现象背后可能隐藏的[本体论结构]"(第 50 页)。在这里,作者忽略了现象学运动中的反形而上学关切,而本书所倡导的现象学则毫无问题地表明,它不仅以形而上学为基础,而且还需要形而上学的基础。作者在结论中试图掩盖这种反对意见,声称他接受 "现象学是一种方法,而不是一种阻碍或拒绝形而上学事业的意识形态"(第 181 页)。他通过对三位中世纪形而上学家的解读,展示了"'站在'同一性与差异性之间的本体论辩证关系之下"(第 181 页)的形而上学是如何在 "参与 "学说中发展起来的:伊本-加比罗尔(犹太教)、伊本-阿拉比(伊斯兰教)和托马斯-阿奎那(基督教)。这三位形而上学家都将这种参与建立在 "慷慨 "的基础之上,托雷斯将 "慷慨 "视为奇妙 "体验 "的可能性的形而上学条件和关键时刻。[托雷斯从上帝作为慷慨本身(以及创造物作为上帝的恩赐,作为上帝对人类的恩赐和呼唤)这一理念出发,到我们作为人类对这种恩赐的奇妙的、主观的调适--我们人类存在核心的无限回应,在信仰中指向上帝--,从而实现了他对神学/人类学的更新。在最后一章,托雷斯剖析了 "奇迹 "事件,并将伦理立场与可持续性、团结和脆弱性联系起来,所有这些都归纳在 "解放 "的标题之下。从现象学到形而上学,从神学到伦理学,这里有很多内容!令人失望的是,文本中存在大量小错误(例如,简单的单词反复出现错误的动词词尾),使得原本就很厚的散文更加难以理解。积极的一面是,托雷斯的文笔很好,并在全文中提供了有规律的总结,说明了书中不同的分析是如何串联在一起的。尽管如此,要跟上论点的脉络还是很费劲。我发现自己不知道 "奇迹 "这条线索是否足以支撑悬挂在其上的各种分析的重量。"奇迹 "忽隐忽现,一会儿成为分析的中心,一会儿又让位给其他主题,然后作者试图说明所有这些路径是如何回到 "奇迹 "的--有时比其他路径更成功。无论 "奇迹 "是否真的能为神学人类学提供一个新的起点,通过一个以前未被充分利用的镜头对现实进行折射,总能让那些本来会留在阴影中的事物显露出来......
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Wonder as a New Starting Point for Theological Anthropology, Postcolonial and Decolonial Studies in Religion and Theology by José Francisco Morales Torres (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Wonder as a New Starting Point for Theological Anthropology, Postcolonial and Decolonial Studies in Religion and Theology by José Francisco Morales Torres
  • Jeffrey Dudiak
José Francisco Morales Torres, Wonder as a New Starting Point for Theological Anthropology, Postcolonial and Decolonial Studies in Religion and Theology. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books (Rowman and Littlefield), 2023. Pp. 226. $100.00, cloth, $45.00, eBook.

This book is a sprawling set of studies, heavy in references to, and quotations from, an impressive range of material across several disciplines. We tour twentieth-century phenomenology and visit a representative medieval ontologist from each of the Jewish, Christian, and Islamic traditions to provide a new vista upon theological anthropology, with implications for our understanding of some of our central and perennial ethical values. Its unifying theme is "wonder." While the author brings a broad and admirable erudition to this book, in style and substance he is more encyclopedic than incisive. I enjoyed learning from each of the parts but was less persuaded by the book's argument as a whole.

The first chapter is a phenomenology of "wonder," which emerges as "an encounter between the 'excess-with' of the other, that acts first, and the available openness of the self" (p. 41). While the analyses of the chapter are both interesting and credible, I would have been more convinced had there been more focus on a sustained phenomenological analysis of wonder itself so that the reader could "see" what is being described, rather than being given a ready-made description of the phenomenon.

In Chapter 2, Torres attempts "a metaphysical inquiry [that] allows one to go where phenomenology cannot and propose what [ontological structure] may lie behind the phenomenon of wonder" (p. 50). Here, the anti-metaphysical concerns that motivated so much of the phenomenological movement are ignored, and the phenomenology that the book advocates is unproblematically shown to not only open up upon, but also to require, a metaphysical grounding. The author attempts to cover this objection in his conclusion by claiming that he accepts "phenomenology as a method, but not as an ideology that discourages or rejects the metaphysical enterprise" (p. 181). He shows how the metaphysics that "'stands under' the ontological dialectic between identity and difference that is present in the event of wonder" (p. 181) is developed across the doctrine of "participation" as it emerges across a reading of three medieval metaphysicians: Ibn Gabirol (Jewish), Ibn Arabi (Islamic), and Thomas Aquinas (Christian). All three ground this participation in "generosity," which Torres presents as a metaphysical condition of possibility for, and a key moment in, the "experience" of wonder. [End Page 289]

Torres proceeds toward his renewal of theological/anthropological by working from this idea of God as Generosity itself (and creation as God's gift perennially given as the gift and call of God to humanity) to our wondrous, subjective attunement as humans to this giving—an infinite response at the core of our human being, directed toward God in faith. In the final chapter, Torres dissects the event of wonder and correlates an ethical stance with sustainability, solidarity, and vulnerability, all synthesized under the rubric of liberation. From phenomenology to metaphysics to theology to ethics—there is a lot here!

The text is plagued by a disappointing number of small errors (e.g., the wrong verb endings repeatedly attached to simple words), making following the already thick prose even harder. On the positive side, Torres writes well and provides regular summaries throughout, indicating how the disparate analyses of the book are meant to hang together. Nevertheless, following the thread of the argument was a struggle. I found myself wondering whether "wonder" was a thread substantial enough to support the weight of the diverse analyses hanging upon it. "Wonder" wandered in and out, centering the analyses for a while before giving way to other themes, the author then attempting to show how all of these paths lead back to "wonder"—sometimes more successfully than others. Whether or not "wonder" really can provide a new starting point for theological anthropology, the refracting of reality through a previously underexploited lens always brings things to light that otherwise would have remained in the shadows...

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