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Insight into Lonergan

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2024

Extract

I have been invited not only to comment on the essays published in this collection, but also to try to ‘place’ Bernard Lonergan and his work. The first task is not easy, the second is virtually impossible. In saying this, I am not denying that it is reasonable to ask questions such as: cWhat is Lonergan up to?’, ‘Where does he stand in contemporary debates?’. The list of contents alone would invite such questions. What is the common factor, beyond the mere fact of common authorship, in sixteen essays, originally published between 1943 and 1965, on such disparate topics as: ‘Finality, Love, Marriage’, ‘A Note on Geometrical Possibility’, ‘The Assumption and Theology’, and ‘Cognitional Structure’? Another reason for wanting to have Lonergan ‘placed’ is that, while the sheer difficulty of most of his work renders him inaccessible to many people, he has profoundly influenced such very different spirits as David Burrell, Bishop Butler, Charles Davis, Sebastian Moore, John Courtney Murray and Michael Novak. Yet, while I believe that Lonergan is one of the most profoundly original and creative Catholic thinkers of our time, it is his very originality that makes it almost impossible to place him. It may seem paradoxical to describe as ‘original’ a man much of whose writing bears the terminological hallmark of neo-scholastic theology and metaphysics. But then, the originality of Beethoven did not consist in the notes of the scale which he employed, but in the conception and structure with which they were ordered.

Frederick Crowe’s editorial introduction to the collection is an excellent biographical and interpretative summary of Lonergan’s work.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1968 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

1 Collection, papers by Lonergan, Bernard, S. J. Edited by Crowe, F. E., Darton, S. J., Longman & Todd. 1967. xxxv + 280 pp. 50sGoogle Scholar.

2 The Exigent Mind: Bernard Lonergan's Intellectualism’, in Spirit as Inquiry; Studies in Honour of Bernard Lonergan (Continuum, Vol. 2, No. 3, Autumn 1964)Google Scholar.

1 From now on, where no reference beyond page‐number is given for a quotation, it is taken from Collection.

1 ‘The Concept of Verbum in the Writings of St Thomas Aquinas’, Theological Studies, Vol. 10 (1949), p. 390.

2 It hardly needs pointing out that, while the literary critic and the exegete are usually aware of the need for some such process, it is employed all too rarely by those who feel competent to declare that ‘Pope A taught X or condemned Y’.

3 Several essays in Collection are concerned with this triple structure; cf. especially ‘Isomorphism of Thomist and Scientific Thought’, ‘Insight: Preface to a Discussion’, and ‘Cognitional Structure’.

1 An interesting topic for research would be the basis of such common ground (and it is quite extensive) as exists between Lonergan and Karl Rahner. A point of contact of particular importance is the work of Joseph Maréchal, from whom has come, as Lonergan says: ‘not a school but a movement, not a set of ready‐made opinions repeated in unison, but a basic line of thought that already has developed in various manners and still continues to do so’ (p. 203).

1 ‘Language and Community’, New Blackfriars, Nov. 1967.

1 ‘The Dehellenization of Dogma’, in Theological Studies, June 1967, pp. 339, 343.