The latest issue of the LYCEUM is out with articles from authors in Greece, England, Ireland, Canada, and the United States.
The LYCEUM especially invites responses to or discussions of articles in this or past issues. Information about submissions can be found here: http://www.lyceumphilosophy.com/?q=node/37 .
You can click on the link below to go to the new issue or click on the pdf link to download a pdf of the entire issue.
Kim’s Dilemma and Ecological Reductionism for the Mind
Anoop Gupta
Ecpyrosis and Cosmos in Heraclitus
Theodoros Christidis
Paul Ricoeur: The Intersection Between Solitude and Connection
Kathleen O’Dwyer
Regularity Theory and Inductive Scepticism: The Fight Against Armstrong
Benjamin Smart
Inter Fidem et Rationem:
Discerning the Proper Intersection of Philosophical and Theological Methodologies in the Works of Nicholas Rescher and Joseph Ratzinger
Andrew M. Haines
Pacifism and Virtue Ethics
Rebecca Carhart
The Burden Faced by External Norms: A Response to Bartol
Colin Wysman
A Publication of the Saint Anselm Philosophy Department
There are courses on Dostoevsky (the Russian existentialist novelist), Philosophy of God, Modern Christian Thinkers, Philosophy and Film, the Nature of Evil, Existentialism, Business Ethics, Logic, Contemporary Philosophy, and Philosophy of Education.
There are also core requirements such as Nature and Human Person and Ethics, as well as Humanities III and IV, for those who want to get requirements out of the way.
The latest issue of the LYCEUM is out with articles from authors in England, Lebanon, Singapore, Canada, and the United States. This issue includes a debate on intercultural critique and recognition theory by Colin Wysman and Jordan Bartol in response to Bartol’s article in the last issue of the LYCEUM.
784 pages
Novato, CA
Presidio Press, 1996
$50.00 + $5.00 mailing (add 2.50 for Credit Card Processing via Paypal)
Writing in the Heythrop Journal 36 (1995), B. R. Brinkman states that Fr. Keefe offers us a “fresh theological principle” by proposing the Eucharist as the key to understanding the movement of history as at once integral and free. Eugene TeSelle in America(vol. 168, no. 16) calls Fr. Keefe’s book a “suggestive” and “faith-centered” work that displays utter confidence in the fundamental coherence of all things, uniquely revealed in the “new and everlasting covenant” established by the life, death, and resurrection of Christ. “Man and his world,” Fr. Keefe writes, “have no truth other than the mystery of the Eucharist, and no meaning or significance which does not find there its source and its culmination.”
Fr. Keefe is Emeritus Professor of Theology at Fordham University. He taught on the faculties of Canisius College, St. Louis University, Marquette University and St. Joseph’s Seminary (Dunwoodie), Yonkers, New York. In 2002, Fr. Keefe was the Cardinal Edmund Szoka Distinguished Visiting Professor of Theology at Sacred Heart Major Seminary, Archdiocese of Detroit.
This work, perhaps the most innovative piece of Catholic systematic theology produced in America in the last fifty years, was first published in two volumes by University Press of America (1991). The Presidio Press revised edition contains the entire two volumes in one, and includes an Appendix that offers an important summary of the whole. The only remaining copies from the original Presidio printing, still in the publisher’s cellophane wrap, are available exclusively through:
Kevin A. McMahon
Department of Theology
Saint Anselm College
Box 1667
Manchester, NH 03102
kmcmahon@anselm.edu
You can order through this form and pay with a check sent via US Mail or by using your credit card with Paypal.