Schall writes on-line at: Schall's IgnatiusInsight.com
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Catholic
Mind: The mind that is Catholic is open to all sources of information, including what comes from Revelation. Revelation is not opposed to reason as if it were some blind source. Revelation has its own intelligibility that can be grasped and compared or addressed to what we know in reason. Catholicism does not define reason as if it only meant a reason that follows some methodology where the terms of the method decide what we are allowed to see or consider.
The very definition of mind is that power that is open to all that is.
We human beings are not gods. But we do know and the object of our knowledge
is all that is.
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book reviews Review by Christopher S. Morrissey Review by Robert Reilly Review by Tracey Rowland
Revelation
and Political Philosophy: An
interview with Schall about his article, |
The
Present American Polity Libraries
without Readers Read James V. Schall on David Walsh On
the Measure and Conservation of Human Things "Attempts are often made to convince people that we have reached the twilight of the age of certainty in the knowledge of truth, and that we are irrevocably condemned to the total absence of meaning, the provisional nature of all knowledge, and to permanent instability and relativity," John Paul II remarked in an address to Rectors of Polish Universities. "In this situation, it appears imperative to reaffirm a basic confidence in human reason and its capacity to know the truth, including absolute and definitive truth. Man is capable of elaborating a uniform and organic conception of knowledge. The fragmentation of knowledge destroys mans inner unity. Man aspires to the fullness of knowledge, since he is a being who by his very nature seeks the truth and cannot live without it. Contemporary scholarship, and especially present day philosophy, each in its own sphere, needs to rediscover that sapiential dimension which consists in the search for the definitive and overall meaning of human existence." Schall on The Not-So-Dark Ages Sylvain Gouguenheim, Aristote au Mont-Saint-Michel
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