God and the City
Autor D. C. Schindleren Limba Engleză Paperback – 8 ian 2024
political theory or other, nor on the legitimacy of political action or the distinctiveness of particular regimes, but on the nature of political order as such, and how this order implicates the
fundamental questions of existence, those concerning man, being, and God.
Aristotle, and Aquinas after him, identified metaphysics and politics as “architectonic” sciences, since each concerns in some respect the whole of reality, of which the particular
sciences study a part. Chapter one of this book argues that, just as metaphysics, in studying being as a whole, cannot but address the question of God in some respect, so too does politics, the ordering of human life as a whole, necessarily implicate the existence of God. In this regard, the modern liberal project has deluded itself in attempting to render religion a private, rather than a genuinely political, matter. We cannot organize human existence without making some claim, whether implicitly or explicitly, about the nature of God and God’s relation to the world.
The second chapter approaches this theme from the anthropological dimension. As Plato affirmed, the “city is the soul writ large”: if man is religious by nature, he cannot be properly
understood, and the human good cannot be properly secured and fostered, if the “God question” is “bracketed out” of the properly political order. Moreover, if we fail to recognize the
essentially political dimension of relation to God, we will be unable properly to grasp the presence of God in the (ecclesial and sacramental) Body of Christ: God cannot be real in the
Church as Church unless he is also real in the city as city (and vice versa).
In his De regno, Aquinas famously affirms that “the king is to be in the kingdom what the soul is in the body and what God is in the world.” Chapter three offers a careful study of the
body-soul relationship in order to illuminate, on the one hand, the nature of political authority, and, on the other, the precise way that God is present in human community.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781587313288
ISBN-10: 1587313286
Pagini: 216
Dimensiuni: 114 x 178 x 11 mm
Greutate: 0.18 kg
Editura: University of Chicago Press
ISBN-10: 1587313286
Pagini: 216
Dimensiuni: 114 x 178 x 11 mm
Greutate: 0.18 kg
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Notă biografică
D.C. Schindler is Professor of Metaphysics and Anthropology at The John Paul II Institute in Washington, D.C. Prior to his appointment to the Institute, he taught for twelve years at
Villanova University, as one of the founding members of the Humanities Department. Schindler has published widely in philosophy, particularly on the transcendental properties of being
(goodness, truth, and beauty) and their anthropological correlates (freedom, reason, and love), but his recent work has been on the nature of political order. Schindler is a translator of
philosophy and literature from French and German, an editor of the North American edition of Communio: International Catholic Review, and an author of many books, including two volumes of a projected trilogy on the nature of freedom: Freedom from Reality: On the Diabolical Character of Modern Liberty (Notre Dame, 2017), and Retrieving Freedom: The Christian
Appropriation of Classical Tradition (Notre Dame, 2022). He lives in Hyattsville, MD, with his wife and three children.
Villanova University, as one of the founding members of the Humanities Department. Schindler has published widely in philosophy, particularly on the transcendental properties of being
(goodness, truth, and beauty) and their anthropological correlates (freedom, reason, and love), but his recent work has been on the nature of political order. Schindler is a translator of
philosophy and literature from French and German, an editor of the North American edition of Communio: International Catholic Review, and an author of many books, including two volumes of a projected trilogy on the nature of freedom: Freedom from Reality: On the Diabolical Character of Modern Liberty (Notre Dame, 2017), and Retrieving Freedom: The Christian
Appropriation of Classical Tradition (Notre Dame, 2022). He lives in Hyattsville, MD, with his wife and three children.