Lexington Books
Pages: 228
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-4094-0 • Hardback • September 2016 • $89.00 • (£68.00)
978-1-4985-4095-7 • eBook • September 2016 • $84.50 • (£65.00)
Dale W. Cannon is professor emeritus of philosophy and religious studies at Western Oregon University.
Ronald L. Hall is professor of philosophy at Stetson University.
- Refinding the Personal Dale W. Cannon and Ronald L. Hall
Philosophical Anthropology- Why Is the Personal So Important? Bruce Haddox and Edward St. Clair
- Being Post-Critical Dale W. Cannon
- Critical Recollection Ronald L. Hall
- The Genealogy of Poteat’s Philosophical Anthropology Bruce B. Lawrence
- The Primacy of the Person David W. Rutledge
- Dethroning Epistemology Ronald L. Hall
Theological Considerations- Personhood and the Problematic of Christianity James W. Stines
- Incarnational Theology Elizabeth Newman
- Towards a Post-Critical Theology R. Melvin Keiser
Aesthetic Considerations- Post-Critical Aesthetics Kieran Cashell
- Paul Cézanne and the Numinous Power of the Real William H. Poteat
These essays, especially those by Bruce Haddox and Edward St. Clair, include richly evocative reminiscences of what it was like to be Poteat’s student. They also, especially those by Dale Cannon and Ron Hall, include fine expositions of Polanyi’s thought. . . . How appropriate that this jewel box of a book should culminate with such a rich example of how Poteat’s language itself, plumbed to its premodern depths, can help us find our way back to where we have been all along, but awakened from the amnesia modernity has fostered in us and refreshed for the tasks of weaning our intellectual world in its many facets from the deadly fixations that threaten to blind it to the obvious."
— Tradition & Discovery
This book is an echo chamber, fraught with strong voices out of regard for a common program, accompanied by an invitation to those readers assiduous in search of fresh provocations. The provocative voice of William H. Poteat populates the echo chambers of his students and auditors from their first meetings to postmortem recollections in their own classrooms and studies. It is cunningly appropriate these essays were first uttered in the voices of the authors in a conference at Yale Divinity School, called to celebrate the establishment of the Poteat Archive. For the readers of these essays it is a bonus to have reprinted an essay by Poteat which offers them an exhibition of his work in its prime as well as providing the readers an opportunity to reappraise the essays in this collection in the immediate vicinity of “Paul Cezanne and the Numinous Power of the Real."
— Ruel Tyson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
This collection of essays, devoted to the philosophy of William H. Poteat, is the first of its kind. Required reading for those concerned with Polanyi and philosophical anthropology, it will also be of interest to anyone concerned with existentialism or phenomenology, or anyone simply curious about where modern philosophy went wrong. Devoted to the personal and the post-critical, the essays are themselves warmly personal, celebrating the life and teaching of professor Poteat as much as his work.
— Ryan Hickerson, Western Oregon University