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Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
October 2022
Print publication year:
2022
Online ISBN:
9781009118729

Book description

Belief and credal commitment sometimes seem to make less and less sense in the West. A kind of 'cultural amnesia' has taken hold, where formal religious adherence begins to seem almost unthinkable. This is especially so for the idea of divine revelation. Robyn Horner argues this means we need to re-evaluate how theology proceeds, focusing not so much on beliefs but on experience. Exploring ways in which the experiential might open human beings up to divine possibility, the author turns to phenomenology (especially in the French philosophical tradition) because it seeks to examine unrestrictedly what is given through involved encounter. Bringing phenomenology and poststructuralism together, Horner develops the idea of revelation as an 'event' wherein God interrupts and exceeds human experience, affecting and transforming it. This striking concept, named but largely unexplored by theology, articulates a notion of supernatural revelation which now starts to appear both coherent and plausible.

Reviews

‘This is a book of strong and impressive scholarship. It engages with its material at a seasoned level, the author clearly having dwelt for a considerable period with the difficulties and challenges involved. It articulates the main theories and their implications with rigour and insight, and with a general lucidity that allows even the uninitiated access. It covers important theological territory, especially from a Catholic perspective, as it tries to come to terms with the notion of revelation and its possibility within a post-metaphysical world, using various lenses of French phenomenology especially to focus the task. It does not shy away from the problematics of thinking ‘religion' in our current times, and has an accomplished grasp of the continental philosophy and theoretical critiques that have brought those problematics to the fore.'

Andrew. W. Hass - University of Stirling

‘This is a book of strong and impressive scholarship. It covers important theological territory, as it tries to come to terms with the notion of revelation and its possibility within a post-metaphysical world, using various lenses of French phenomenology especially to focus the task.'

Andrew. W. Hass - University of Sterling

‘It is important to continue to discuss – as Robyn Horner does here – the possibility, however minimal, of revelation in an age in which divine communication is no longer taken for granted but is instead looked at with suspicion. The author, to meet this challenge, tries to root revelation in deep and meaningful experiences, which are not always mediated by concepts, discursive faculties, or reflective and propositional attitudes. I find that extremely important, since much of the way we engage with the world is in a non-conceptual manner. Mood, affection, embodied habit: each of these consists of modes of inhabiting the world that important thinkers like Heidegger, Husserl, Merleau-Ponty and Marion discuss in some detail. We tend to negotiate the world by way of ‘feel' and ‘intuition', and by what we ‘desire and love', not by concepts we work out with deliberative reason in stepwise fashion. Robyn Horner understands this well, and her book is an able and intelligent exploration of the prospects for a phenomenology of revelation in a secular age.'

Joseph Rivera - Dublin City University

‘Robyn Horner's book is an able and intelligent exploration of the prospects for a phenomenology of revelation in a secular age.'

Joseph Rivera - Dublin City University

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