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Meaning and Authenticity: Bernard Lonergan and Charles Taylor on the Drama of Authentic Human Existence

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Meaning and Authenticity: Bernard Lonergan and Charles Taylor on the Drama of Authentic Human Existence
Lonergan Studies

Brian J. Braman
University of Toronto Press © 2008

Cloth: Mar 6 2008 Active/Available

World Rights
160pp /
Volume


The language of self-fulfillment, self-realization, and self-actualization (in short, ?authenticity?) has become common in contemporary culture. The desire to be ?authentic? is implicitly a desire to shape one?s self in accordance with an ideal, and the concern for what it means to be authentic is, in many ways, the modern form of the ancient question ?what is the life of excellence?? However, this notion of authenticity has its critics, Christopher Lasch, for instance, who equates it with a form of narcissism and Theodor Adorno who views it as a glorification of privatism.

Brian J. Braman argues that, despite criticisms, it is possible to speak about human authenticity as something that addresses contemporary concerns as well as the ancient preoccupation with the nature of the good life. He refers to the theories of Bernard Lonergan and Charles Taylor, thinkers who placed a high value on the search for human authenticity. Lonergan discusses authenticity in terms of a three-fold conversion with intellectual, moral, and religious implications while Taylor views it as a rich, vibrant, and important addition to conversations about what it means to be human.

Meaning and Authenticity presents an engaging dialogue between two thinkers, both of whom maintain that there is a normative conception of authentic human life that overcomes moral relativism, narcissism, privatism, and the collapse of the public self.

Brian J. Braman is a professor in the Department of Philosophy at Boston College.



Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

  1. Martin Heidegger: The One Thing Needful
    1. Dasein’s Being-in-the-World
    2. The Structure of Care
    3. Rupture and Authenticity
    4. Historicity and Dasein
  2. Charles Taylor: Ethics and the Expressivist Turn
    1. Retrieval of a Notion
    2. The Structure of Identity
    3. Moral Ontology and the Good
    4. Hypergoods and Moral Reasoning
    5. Epiphany as a Moral Source
  3. Bernard Lonergan: On Being Oneself
    1. The Drama of Human Existence
    2. The Existential Gap and Conversion
    3. Authenticity as an Activity
    4. Intellectual Conversion
    5. Moral Conversion
    6. Religious Conversion
  4. Taylor and Lonergan: Dialogue and Dialectic
    1. Art
    2. Cognitional Theory
    3. Knowing from Above Downwards
    4. The Question of Foundation
    5. The Human Good
    6. Lonergan beyond Taylor

Conclusion

Notes

Bibliography

Index





University of Toronto Press acknowledges the financial support for its publishing activities of the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP).

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