The Anthropological Turn: The Human Orientation of the Theology of Karl Rahner
 
Anton Losinger
Fordham Univ Press, 2000-01-01  112 pages
 
 

The
 form and content of the study of theology in the present, modern epoch 
are marked by a vast quantity and variety of the most diverse and, in 
part, the most divergent points of departure. The classical unity and 
perspicuity of the world of theological thought, so typical in earlier 
centuries, has dissolved with the plurality of the horizons and problems
 of modern thinking. The reality of the world, science, and theology 
appears no longer as a single orbis,but rather as an open and unbounded 
space. Indeed, precisely for the study of theology in modern 
universities, the catchphrase, the new vastness,thus appears to hold as 
well. This book is intended to provide Christians and theologians with 
an access to Karl Rahner to unpack his thinking and to make a 
theological inspection of his work possible. In this respect it is 
essential to locate the central point of departure for the theology of 
Karl Rahner in the concerns and questions of human beings and, to take a
 cue from the key concept of the anthropological point of departure,to 
make understandable the underlying tendency of Rahner's work. Mastering 
scientific inquiries in the everyday praxis of contemporary theological 
studies of necessity often takes the unsatisfactory form of a 
compilation of various essays, articles, and contributions to handbooks.
 Precisely for this reason, immersing oneself in the work of an 
epochally significant author, in the world of his thoughts, and in his 
theological profile-as here in the case of the theology of Karl 
Rahner-ought to be, not only a dutiful exercise, but a delightful change
 of pace, perhaps even a passion: studium in the proper sense of the 
word.
 
 
 
 
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