Opening Introduction: Talking About Experience Part I: The Theophanic Argument, or Experience in Thought: Anselm of Canterbury 1. Of God Who Comes to Mind 2. The Theophanic Argument 3. The Debt for the Gift Part II: Hermeneutics and Phenomenology or the Experience of the World: Hugh and Richard of Saint-Victor 4. God an “Open Book” 5. To Live One’s Body 6. The Third Party of Love Part III: Affectivity and Spirituality or Experience in Affects: Aelred of Rievaulx and Bernard of Clairvaux 7. To Feel Oneself Fully Alive 8. Experience and Empathy 9. Openness [apérité] and Freedom Epilogue: Hold Fast to Humankind Index
In the first English translation of Le Livre de l'expérience (2017) Emmanuel Falque continues to challenge and push the boundaries between philosophy and theology.
Emmanuel Falque is Professor of Philosophy and Honorary Dean of the Faculty of Philosophy at the Catholic University of Paris, France. He has published widely in phenomenology, philosophy of religion and medieval philosophy. His most recent publications include Nothing to It (2020), The Guide to Gethsemane (2019), The Loving Struggle (2018), and Crossing the Rubicon (2016). Falque is also the founder of the rapidly growing International Network of Philosophy of Religion.
With his characteristic erudition and clarity, Emmanuel Falque
draws our attention to the nature of experience by plumbing the
rich resources of Christian mysticism and monastic theology. He
demonstrates that experience is never simply a matter of
self-knowledge or empirical inquiry; it puts us to the test,
changing and transforming us. The result is a text full of wisdom
and rich insight, and one of remarkable and unexpected relevance
for contemporary phenomenology.
*Brian Treanor, Professor of Philosophy, Loyola Marymount
University, USA*
How does God enter into finite human thinking and feeling? Like the
wise householder sharing treasures old and new, Emmanuel Falque
shows how Christian monasticism remains a surprisingly fresh
interlocutor today. A master class in the precise, generous
listening to the premodern past that is renewing theology and
phenomenology alike.
*David Albertson, Associate Professor of Religion, University of
Southern California, USA*
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